24 February 2014
The "Highway to Hell" video
This vehicular accident in Russia apparently didn't kill anyone (the truck driver escapes), but it is clearly one of the most spectacular such videos on the 'net, not for the size of the explosions, but for the number of them (apparently propane gas cylinders or the equivalent). It goes on and on and on....
BTW, I used to work with compressed gas cylinders. All of the observers in this video are batshit crazy to remain this close to the accident. A cylinder of compressed gas is the noncombat equivalent of a wartime torpedo; it can penetrate concrete walls if the neck is broken. Run, don't walk, away from incidents like this.
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I'm pretty sure this is China, not Russia. Did you notice the Chinese writing on the highway signs?
ReplyDeleteI see Cyrilic, not Chinese, though I can see the letters looking like hanyu from far enough away given the resolution.
DeleteDoh! You are right. I was able to stop it and see. My mistake. Sorry. Just had to boost the resolution.
DeleteModern gas cylinders have a flow restrictor built into the shoulder so even if you break off the neck, the risk is a _lot_ lower. Also see here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3cLrb7M7Mtw
ReplyDeleteVery interesting video, Richard. I wonder whether the same manufacturing standards are being applied to the non-portable-size cylinders for medical grade oxygen. The ones in the YouTube video looked to be about size D (~10#). Some hospitals and home situations without central O2 delivery have size M (~66#), which would be more like the size of the propane ones on the truck.
DeleteThanks for the video link.
The ones in the video link are scuba tanks.
DeleteI know for a fact that German storage cylinders (50 liter, 200 or 300 bar) have the same. I read that the small low-pressure propane/butane gas cylinders for BBQing etc also feature flow restrictors as well, now.
I would suspect that medical equipment has the same security features as BBQ tanks, but I don't know for sure either way. Also, the U.S. may be different in regulations, etc.
See 2:42~ for a cylinder properly taking off to the right.
ReplyDeleteand 3:24
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