|
Otteration posted:Whatever that stuff is, yeah, check your drain plumbing after use. The MSDS just said R 134, so it's purely acting through pressure.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 06:01 |
|
|
# ? Jun 5, 2024 07:58 |
|
jetz0r posted:Yeah, if the load isn't secured, then this happens: You think that's bad; this is what happens when the load is secured:
|
# ? May 8, 2021 06:07 |
|
Pekinduck posted:Yeah the source said they didn't lock the casters and the carts smashed their way out the back door. I don’t think I’ve ever encountered a caster wheel lock that worked well enough that I’d trust it to stop what it was attached to.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 06:12 |
|
Caster locks are to keep poo poo from rolling away on level ground. That should have been strapped.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 06:48 |
|
I don't understand what went wrong. I said "that isn't going anywhere" like I was supposed to.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 06:51 |
|
Cojawfee posted:I don't understand what went wrong. I said "that isn't going anywhere" like I was supposed to. Did you remember to give it a good one-armed wiggle, too?
|
# ? May 8, 2021 06:54 |
|
GotLag posted:The MSDS just said R 134, so it's purely acting through pressure. Yeah, looks like it works well; just a lot of pressure. But typical bathroom sink drain plumbing is crap. If he had blocked the overflow drain, his trap might have ended up on the floor of his vanity.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 07:12 |
|
https://www.instagram.com/reel/COHf2pEBS4u/?igshid=c13vt3bo1a9v Sorry for IG post but it’s relevant
|
# ? May 8, 2021 07:22 |
|
Just another day at the marina, no big deal. https://i.imgur.com/UdwzUDZ.mp4
|
# ? May 8, 2021 08:23 |
|
armchairyoda posted:Lol, let me tell you some stories of farmers just “digging for new fence posts”... Couple of years back I got a call on our Highways customer line and when I picked it up could barely hear the caller over an awful howling noise. I could tell she was incandescent about a gas line but the details were getting lost so eventually I managed to work out where she was calling from and sent a supervisor out to find out what the gently caress. When he got out there she was an elderly farmer out in the sticks without a main gasline so she had a tank on site with a connecting port out on the borderline of our verge and her property. One of our dipshit contractors who do the rural verges had mowed right over the capped connection with one of these and the howling sound was gas erupting from the site under pressure: The gas company ended recapping it quickly and our contractor had to pay out, but I had a sketchy hour or so hoping one of our teams hadn't just turned half a mile of countryside into a bombsite.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 10:45 |
|
Jet Jaguar posted:We had to have our sewer line replaced and at one point they had five guys just standing around, staring into one of the trenches. "Well this can't be good," I said. I still remember the morning they went to dig up the street next to the shop where I worked at the time and with literally the first touch of the drill they hit a gas main. It was fun watching the realisation of the scale of the fuckup develop - we wisely self-evacuated to the next corner as soon as we saw the mirage of what was obviously a *lot* of gas escaping from the small hole in the street, and watched as a confab of police, fire brigade and blokes in all the colours of the high-viz rainbow came to stare at the little hole and shrug (for added fun the street was right next to the police station) before the police moved us back to the next corner, evacuating all of the other shops as they went. Then the only panicked-looking fireman I've ever seen came running down the street shouting MOVE BACK NOW! and we were evacuated a full 500 metres away (coincidentally to right outside a pub where we spent the rest of the day fielding calls from the owner of the shop asking us why we couldn't sneak back through the cordon to grab stuff to sell). Anyway it turns out that they'd hit an undocumented, blocked-off spur of the 3-foot high-pressure main that supplied a big chunk of gas to West London, and the company that were just supposed to be fixing a damaged drain *had* done a survey of where they were supposed to be digging, on the other side of the street, but the crew had gone to the wrong side of the street, seen that there were no marks indicating they couldn't drill, and, welp. e: While trying to find some news reports about it (probably a fool's errand as it happened in the mid-90s so as far as the internet's concerned might as well have been in the Byzantine Empire) I did come across this: quote:The defendants were found to be joint tort feasors in Brooke v. Bool110, where two men goddamnedtwisto fucked around with this message at 11:08 on May 8, 2021 |
# ? May 8, 2021 11:02 |
|
Joint Tortfeasors is my favourite Star Wars character
|
# ? May 8, 2021 11:42 |
|
I have always thought piped gas sounds like a safety hazard right out of dystopian steampunk. I don't know if that's the selection bias from only hearing about it when it goes wrong, or if you all are just too familiar with it to notice.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 12:35 |
|
Jet Jaguar posted:We had to have our sewer line replaced and at one point they had five guys just standing around, staring into one of the trenches. "Well this can't be good," I said. My parents' neighbor a Comcast contractor come out to do some trenching work when I was a kid and they managed to hit the main gas main supplying the neighborhood -- made obvious by a deafening roaring sound you could hear well up the street and chunks of earth pushed up in several neighbors' yards across the street as the gas worked its way out of ground. The contractors were standing around looking confused, some were smoking, so after 20 or so minutes of inaction I called the fire department. Very quickly thereafter the whole block was evacuated and someone got the gas company out to shut off the main and work the repair. Interestingly, the gas company folks weren't concerned about anyone or anything until after the shutoff -- something to do with the fuel-air mixture I suppose. To this day I'm not sure what size line they hit but it must have been a doozy.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 12:57 |
|
Speaking of gas pipelines, this one is from several years ago in Missouri https://www.cbsnews.com/video/massive-gas-pipeline-explosion-caught-on-tape/#x
|
# ? May 8, 2021 14:01 |
|
Computer viking posted:I have always thought piped gas sounds like a safety hazard right out of dystopian steampunk. I don't know if that's the selection bias from only hearing about it when it goes wrong, or if you all are just too familiar with it to notice. Anything delivering the energy needed to heat etc a city is gonna have an exciting failure mode or two
|
# ? May 8, 2021 14:47 |
|
Computer viking posted:I have always thought piped gas sounds like a safety hazard right out of dystopian steampunk. I don't know if that's the selection bias from only hearing about it when it goes wrong, or if you all are just too familiar with it to notice. "The gas line going into my house is working like it's supposed to. None of my poo poo has exploded or caught fire, and my family is healthy and safe." Is not a story anyone, even me, gives a poo poo about. Food for thought; Touching the gas with your bare hands won't instantly kill you. The same cannot be said for the electricity being piped into your home.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 14:48 |
|
On one hand, true. On the other hand, a slow electricity leak into my basement doesn't turn my house into a bomb, and accidentally digging into electrical mains does not carry an overhanging risk of levelling the entire city block. (Also, brushing your hand over 230V may be both risky and unpleasant, but I've done it enough times to confirm that it won't instagib you either.) Computer viking fucked around with this message at 15:04 on May 8, 2021 |
# ? May 8, 2021 15:01 |
|
Computer viking posted:accidentally digging into electrical mains does not carry an overhanging risk of levelling the entire city block. ehhhh. There are exceptions to this. there are some buried high voltage cables where if you puncture the containment, you let out the dielectric cooling oil, and you're going to have a very bad day.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 15:07 |
|
darkwasthenight posted:I had a sketchy hour or so hoping one of our teams hadn't just turned half a mile of countryside into a bombsite. This is why one of my career goals is to never be the Todd in a "if there's a huge fuckup call Todd" sign. MikeCrotch posted:Joint Tortfeasors is my favourite Star Wars character Joint Tortfeasors, notorious crime lord who controls the gas mining operation on the planet Bool-110.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 15:14 |
|
That's fair. Punching through something like a long distance HVDC cable would be better experienced as a youtube documentary a year or two after the crater calms down. I'm just saying that if we had never had piped gas outside industrial settings before, we would have looked at it with some distrust if it were suggested today.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 15:15 |
|
I mean same with gas stations and water heaters. The amount of chemical potential energy you deal with on a daily basis is horrifying if laid out like a risk assessment.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 15:22 |
|
Why dig into a gas line when you can just hack it instead? https://twitter.com/nytimes/status/1391004402148954116?s=21
|
# ? May 8, 2021 15:26 |
|
Zero One posted:Why dig into a gas line when you can just hack it instead? It's not like we weren't warned. Constantly, by doomsayers. Just ignore them though mental health is part of workplace safety.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 15:29 |
|
zedprime posted:I mean same with gas stations and water heaters. The amount of chemical potential energy you deal with on a daily basis is horrifying if laid out like a risk assessment. Gas stations are kind of nuts, yeah - let's just keep huge tanks of volatile and highly flammable chemicals around and let random members of the public come and pump as much as they want/can afford. Not really a huge source of major accidents, somehow.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 15:49 |
|
Computer viking posted:Gas stations are kind of nuts, yeah - let's just keep huge tanks of volatile and highly flammable chemicals around and let random members of the public come and pump as much as they want/can afford. Not really a huge source of major accidents, somehow. If gasoline/diesel wasn't the literal backbone of the world economy, there is no way that it would be approved for use by the public with how carcinogenic and straight up unsafe it is. It's only via collective societal experience and normalization that we (generally) safely handle it so much at all.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 16:05 |
|
Which is also the point I was trying to make about piped gas - except that it has not really been a thing here, so I never got used to the idea in the first place.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 16:08 |
|
Computer viking posted:Gas stations are kind of nuts, yeah - let's just keep huge tanks of volatile and highly flammable chemicals around and let random members of the public come and pump as much as they want/can afford. Not really a huge source of major accidents, somehow. Volatile, flammable and corrosive. If the stuff hadn't basically been grandfathered into our society pre-OSHA you'd need hazmat training just to pump gasoline and diesel into your car.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 16:11 |
|
Zero One posted:Why dig into a gas line when you can just hack it instead? Oh look someone has a flat network
|
# ? May 8, 2021 16:41 |
CommieGIR posted:Oh look someone has a flat network None of this should be even accessible directly from the internet in any way shape or form. At all.
|
|
# ? May 8, 2021 20:37 |
|
So uhh. I live in the NEast. Guess i should go fill up my car gas tanks right now?
|
# ? May 8, 2021 20:58 |
|
BitBasher posted:None of this should be even accessible directly from the internet in any way shape or form. At all. Obviously, but these are the same companies that regularly feature on the CSB's excellent Chemical Safety Failure videos on Youtube.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 20:58 |
|
BitBasher posted:None of this should be even accessible directly from the internet in any way shape or form. At all. I watched a DefCon presentation about some guys who set up a bot to crawl random IPs and found what looked like a control GUI for a German foundry Security by obscurity seems to be a standard accepted by people whose focuses are industrial engineering EvenWorseOpinions fucked around with this message at 21:04 on May 8, 2021 |
# ? May 8, 2021 21:00 |
|
I saw that, or a similar one. He had a pic of what looked like a control interface for some plant and said well I can't read Korean but whatever this is it has the unit "megawatts" behind these numbers so probably it should not be open to being hosed with by some rando
|
# ? May 8, 2021 21:19 |
|
there was also the one where a guy got into a water plant control system via an unsecured or poorly secured vnc host and hosed with the chemical settings
|
# ? May 8, 2021 21:56 |
|
lmao
|
# ? May 8, 2021 22:20 |
|
why did you reply to this 5 month old post?
|
# ? May 8, 2021 22:27 |
|
It's a pretty funny video to be fair
|
# ? May 8, 2021 22:28 |
|
FCKGW posted:why did you reply to this 5 month old post? This thread moves fast and maybe they are one of those people who can't bear to skip over pages.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 22:40 |
|
|
# ? Jun 5, 2024 07:58 |
|
CaptainSarcastic posted:This thread moves fast and maybe they are one of those people who can't bear to skip over pages. Either that, or they woke up after a very very long rest and are trying to catch up.
|
# ? May 8, 2021 22:53 |