[TheForge] Why an acetylene leak is not desirable
Larry Brown
lp.brown at verizon.net
Wed Dec 7 20:32:06 EST 2011
Was just thinking this. That's why it went off when he hit the window
button. Still lucky, maybe had the interior lights shut off when he first
opened the door? If you use a closed vehicle for transporting gas keep a
fresh air vent by opening the window and remove the gas or at least disable
the interior lights if you can't remove it. The damage that can be caused
by a little B tank is nasty, most of us use bigger tanks
Larry Brown
It's good to have a sense of adventure, don't use it up all at once
At 09:38 PM 12/7/2011 +0000, you wrote:
>The way it 'skinned' the vehicle, it seems it probably had most of the gas
>out of the cabin, but was still trapped in the doors/body sides when it
>was set off. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Mike Spencer"
><mspencer at tallships.ca> To: theforge at mailman.qth.net Sent: Wednesday,
>December 7, 2011 12:05:49 PM Subject: [TheForge] Â Why an acetylene leak
>is not desirable Â
>Â Â http://coloradok5.com/forums/showthread.php?t=291529 And why you
>shouldn't use *anything* electrical to clear the air if you do have one.
>This guy must have the same Guardian Angel as Frosty.
More information about the TheForge
mailing list