Mesazhi #6445 i Listės sė E-mailave lml@lancaironline.net
Nga: <RWolf99@aol.com>
Lėnda: Nitrogen Safety
Data: Thu, 24 Aug 2000 13:22:42 EDT
Pėr: <lancair.list@olsusa.com>
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In a message dated 8/24/00 0:34:55 AM EST, lancair.list@olsusa.com writes:

<< we lost two
 fellow employees at GE Plastics who mistakingly entered a Nitrogen purged
 vessel >>

I have to second this.  I've been working in rocketry for over a decade.  You
would think that filling a vehicle with high explosives and putting a match
to it is the dangerous part, but the safety record says otherwise.  I'm told
the two leading causes of death in the rocket world are asphyxiation from
nitrogen and heavy equipment accidents (cranes, forklifts, etc).  I know for
a fact that the largest accident catagory (non-fatal) at Orbital Sciences is
"slips, trips and falls".

Fortunately, I don't think we're at much risk of nitrogen asphyxiation while
filling up a landing gear strut or a tire.  But you might want to have your
garage or hangar door open when you do it, just the same.  I wouldn't get any
more concerned than that, although for you anal types, you can buy oxygen
monitors that sound an alarm when the oxygen percentage goes below 15%.

- Rob Wolf
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