Incident Investigation: Fuel Tanker Explodes, Fatally Injuring Worker | WorkSafeBC

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 24 июл 2024
  • The presence of static electricity where a flammable liquid is being handled or used is an extreme workplace hazard and can lead to explosions and fire.
    This video slide show recreates an incident at a workplace in British Columbia where a fuel transfer worker was fatally injured when gasoline vapours were ignited by a spark from static electricity. It shows the importance of having effective bonding and grounding systems in place and the hazards of static electricity onboard fuel tankers, and provides information on industry best practices for fuel tanker loading procedures.
    Using animation and photos from an incident site, the video depicts the events that led to the incident, and describes the underlying factors and unsafe practices, and how the lack of an effective health and safety program contributed to the incident. It also emphasizes the importance of adopting effective control measures such as engineering controls to reduce the risk.
    Visit our website for more information and resources on workplace safety for fuel transfer and bonding and grounding: www.worksafebc.com
    View other incident investigation slide shows: • Incident Investigation...
    Timestamps:
    0:00 Intro to the incident: gasoline vapours ignited during fuel transfer
    0:45 How static electricity is generated in fuel tanker hoses
    1:14 Bonding and grounding to eliminate static electricity in a fuel delivery system
    1:52 Incident recreation
    2:58 Top-loading vs. bottom-loading methods and the safety advantages of bottom-loading
    3:48 Safe work practices for top-loading and splash-loading
    4:18 No way to check grounding and bonding
    4:55 Process for fuel transfer
    5:14 The components needed to start the fire
    5:38 The three likely sources of the static electricity spark
    6:27 The explosion and lack of fire control safety system
    7:13 The factors contributing to the fire
    7:44 Failure of the health and safety program to detect and control the hazard
    9:18 Engineering controls required for effective grounding and bonding
    __________________________________________________________
    We’re working to make a difference in workplace health and safety in British Columbia, Canada. By partnering with workers and employers, we help British Columbians come home from work safe every day.
    Subscribe to our channel: ruclips.net/user/WorkSafe...
    Find us on social media:
    Twitter: / worksafebc
    Instagram: / worksafebc
    Facebook: / worksafebc
    LinkedIn: / worksafebc
    Visit our website for the most up-to-date health and safety information and regulatory requirements: www.worksafebc.com
    #WorkSafeBC #workplacehealthandsafety
    Legal terms:
    All videos posted by the Workers’ Compensation Board (“WorkSafeBC”) are protected by Canadian and international copyright laws, policies, and treaties. The use of WorkSafeBC videos and other materials is governed by WorkSafeBC’s copyright and trademark statement, available here: www.worksafebc.com/en/legal/c.... Videos cannot be uploaded to other channels without prior permission. If you wish to request permission for use of our videos, please contact us: copyright [at] worksafebc.com

Комментарии • 504

  • @worksafebc
    @worksafebc  Год назад +20

    Find information and resources on workplace safety for fuel transfer and bonding and grounding here: www.worksafebc.com

  • @elliotpecora737
    @elliotpecora737 2 года назад +411

    In electrical engineering, I have designed stations for 95% alcohol tanker unloading. Called a grounding indicator, it has a clamp you attach to the fuel tanker which then sends a signal to the control station, which only after it has been properly grounded, will allow the flow of alcohol to start. This guarantees that no static electricity can be discharged while unloading.

    • @michaelwalker1145
      @michaelwalker1145 Год назад +20

      That system is in bulk fuel terminals. You must ground the vehicle before it will pump.
      One driver didn't and came back to find his truck still empty.

    • @ranger-1214
      @ranger-1214 Год назад +17

      Check out the U.S. systems called Scully, used widely in the military especially the Air Force. They have an overfill protection system, that you can then add an ST-47 Groundhog. It won’t allow loading until there is a complete ground, and if during the operation that is broken it will shut down immediately. Many think it is a pain, but it keeps people alive.

    • @urareknaw
      @urareknaw Год назад +4

      Scully plugs are the norm here and the static clamp you talk about. Without a green light the plant doesn’t initiate

    • @andya2665
      @andya2665 Год назад +6

      In medical field we measure ground resistance, and leakgage current on all electrical devices to eliminate shock hazards, and to prevent static in areas where there are proximal O2, and anesthesia gases in use.

    • @cliffnelson1174
      @cliffnelson1174 Год назад +1

      AKA as a scully.

  • @obviousness8113
    @obviousness8113 3 года назад +317

    I work in a completely different industry but these lessons are very applicable to my industry and many others. I hope people watch these, learn, and apply these lessons.

    • @Stopthisrightnow560
      @Stopthisrightnow560 2 года назад +26

      The biggest lesson I've taken away from this is that safety protocols are there because someone before you paid the ultimate price for fucking up.
      Never deviate from the safety plans!

    • @jerrykinnin7941
      @jerrykinnin7941 Год назад

      @@Stopthisrightnow560 if ground loading is authorized
      Why would you top load? He didn't want to do the math to bottom load.
      He wanted to sight it full without over filling.

    • @seanstuchbery
      @seanstuchbery Год назад

      i work in a medical laboratory and i will no longer be splash loading

  • @ToyotaKTM
    @ToyotaKTM 3 года назад +348

    I wonder how many times he did this exact same thing before he was killed by one spark.

    • @vtwinbreed
      @vtwinbreed 2 года назад +20

      I've pumped fuel over the top of the truck from one compartment into other compartments many of times over 14 years.

    • @cjbotts
      @cjbotts 2 года назад +43

      @@vtwinbreed top loading gasoline is plain stupid

    • @User_92020
      @User_92020 2 года назад +8

      @@vtwinbreed
      I'm the president of Columbia.

    • @virt1one
      @virt1one 2 года назад +7

      well, he won't do THAT again.

    • @hershey3
      @hershey3 Год назад

      @@User_92020 sick

  • @ONTHEEDGEFRED
    @ONTHEEDGEFRED Год назад +85

    Wow, I've driven trucks for 35 years and never realized something like this was a possibility, this was a very informative video here.

  • @mitchkelsey8743
    @mitchkelsey8743 3 года назад +208

    While in the Air Force (mid-60s) I cross trained from Survival Equipment to POL. While watching this slide show, I cannot tell you the memories this evoked. Bottom line, I worked on the flight line and in the fuel yard. I am beyond lucky to still be here some 50 odd years later. There were so many mistakes made...

    • @williammorgan8786
      @williammorgan8786 3 года назад +34

      somehow i was sent to an aviation unit in 'Nam. my mos was not not there. i was sent down to the flight line and was now a pol guy refueling acft. our fixed wings got av gas, 4 or 5 fuel tanks on the acft, depending on acft type, all were so very slow to refuel, no closed circuit stuff, all splash and go. you guys had a nice filling stand for the truck, concrete pad, nice pipes, everything clean, you could put the pipe deep in the tanker, but then sometimes i had to go to the navy to get fuel, a shit hole of a place, all mud or dust, and nothing against the navy either, a piece of suction hose would be handed up to me on top of the truck, i would wrestle into my tank opening and then have to lay on top of the hose to hold it inside the tank, hose was always filthy, all splash loading, then holler for the navy guy to turn off the gasoline pump and watch another 100 gals. go in the tank and spill over the top of the truck onto the ground, a big mess i did not like. no grounding cables here either. all we had was a 1200 gal. tanker and that amt. was gone in no time and then go back for more. if i had been you i would have stayed in the ALSE shop. no fun refueling in all kinds of weather and not even a damn rain coat. it got cold in Danang area especially in the rain. i hated that job and hated the unit for that matter, surely worst place i ever stopped at and i don't mean Vietnam either. no reply needed to my gibberish, thanks for your service.

    • @Steph6n
      @Steph6n 2 года назад +7

      @@williammorgan8786 this is incredible... amazing how bad it used to be and that lessons are still not learned from this important history.
      Thank you for sharing this.

    • @nickmartin1527
      @nickmartin1527 2 года назад +1

      @@williammorgan8786 Jesus, wow

    • @jed-henrywitkowski6470
      @jed-henrywitkowski6470 Год назад +1

      @@williammorgan8786 what? That's how the Russkis did refuelling during World War Two!
      I'd have thought we'd have at least a moderately better system during Nam.

    • @stewoe7157
      @stewoe7157 Год назад +2

      If you were working only with jet fuel, it's not as dangerous. Jet fuel will not ignite with a spark. Unlike gasoline. I don't know what fuel they used in aviation in the 60's.

  • @seanb3516
    @seanb3516 3 года назад +183

    It's astonishing how many Errors you have to string together before you get an Incident.

    • @Danrul
      @Danrul 3 года назад +30

      My takeaway from these incident reports is quite different: any one of these errors could allow an incident to occur, but as they stack up together the odds increase exponentially. On a similar note, not all errors can be classed the same way. Errors further up the chain of command (eg, moving the parking location without relocating the relevant safety equipment, ambivalent SWP, lack of inspection to correct these issues) create an environment where individual lapses in judgement are allowed to have tragic consequences.
      A lot of different errors occured here, and all those errors contribute to how badly things went, but every one of those errors constitutes a potential tragedy on their own.

    • @someperson7
      @someperson7 3 года назад +8

      Moral: If the bad thing CAN happen, take away it's chance to happen. This is risk control.

    • @FixItYerself
      @FixItYerself 3 года назад +3

      seeing how ignorant the driver was to how dangerous his work procedures were, it makes you wonder how many times he did the same thing before, lucky enough to survive. it's sad to see someone die in that manner before safety issues were fixed

    • @carmenschumann826
      @carmenschumann826 3 года назад

      @@Danrul . . . thank you for clarifying this the correct way, there were no valid excuses ! Sometimes it's really astonishing how stupid behavior can sum up before there is an bad incident . . . finally - unable of counting this sadly lost life - having the necessary safety measures in place for sure wouldn't have implicated higher costs anyway . . .

    • @randywl8925
      @randywl8925 3 года назад +2

      @@carmenschumann826 the stupid behaviors were caused by the company. Have they had a video such as this one to show to all drivers and explain the importance of grounding..... That guy wouldn't be up there with his rayon t-shirt and Ray-Ban sunglasses and straw hat.
      I'm a floor layer by profession. I've never hired anyone to do work for me so I have some mechanical knowledge. I've rebuilt a couple of engines, ported a set of heads...... All kinds of stuff. I know nothing about how to load a truck with fuel but the first thing I would think about not knowing anything about that industry would be sparks.
      Some people grow up with mechanical smarts. Some people just go through the motions randomly.
      This company failed miserably to perform safety checks in safety meetings to explain what would happen if you are not properly grounded and if the truck was not properly grounded. that sort of cleaning should scare the living bejuses out of people so that they follow their instructions. Any employee sound not following those instructions should be fired immediately.

  • @wb2194
    @wb2194 Год назад +51

    I am a retired construction safety engineer. In my experience, employers are more concerned with money than safety. They say "Safety First" but that's a lie. When I would bring up safety violations to management the answer was usually "we've always done it this way, and we see no need to change."

    • @Rambomathie
      @Rambomathie Год назад +5

      I've done It this way my whole life and never had a Accident... Your been lucky your whole life, Is my response.

    • @mtsflorida
      @mtsflorida Год назад

      Exactly right. No one follows the book. They take short cuts to get by quickly until things begin to break down and property is damaged and people die. Driving laws are not followed, maintenance is not kept and violations go uncorrected and even after fatalities they don't change the way they should but only attempt to appease the victims family.

    • @medler2110
      @medler2110 Год назад

      Both employers and Employees are guilty of the "We've done it this way for years" attitude, its sometimes harder to get employees to accept new working practices, than getting the employer to agree and pay for their introduction.

    • @VirtualPainRecords
      @VirtualPainRecords Год назад +4

      I'm an event technician in Germany and in apprenticeship school we were always taught to do exactly the same like you said. If someone was like 'we've always done it this way and it works' we just say 'noooo, we are NOT gonna do it this way because it's not safe and 100% illegal, we're either gonna do it right or we are gonna cancel the job no matter what because safety is all we have'. Nobody is gonna risk such an illegal and unsafe way just to make something work. Just be creative and don't lose your job because of not carrying about safety as much as you should do. That's just essential. And btw if you'd do this in Germany and someone will find out (or even gets hurt) you'll be permanently banned for executing that job and will have to go to court, most likely paying a huge fine or even go to jail if someone gets injured.

    • @danielebrparish4271
      @danielebrparish4271 Год назад

      It creates wealth for local law firms and since insurance agents are paid on commission the increase in rates due to claims gives the local agents a pay raise.

  • @jamminwrenches860
    @jamminwrenches860 Год назад +15

    The biggest problem seems to be most people don't understand that static can be created just by splash loading - simply filling a vessel the way we have hundreds of times before. It's just difficult to think that a liquid could produce electricity.

  • @geniferteal4178
    @geniferteal4178 Год назад +23

    Watching a minute of this video and I already understand the importance of grounding when moving fuel on these trucks. Just the movement of fuel can cause the charge. I had no idea. I hope all employees watch this and learn how important grounding can be. It's something I would never be lazy about if I work there.

  • @paulaskew1294
    @paulaskew1294 Год назад +20

    I watched a safety video at fuel terminal. I will never forget this statement from it. Gasoline has a designed mission. And that's to find an ignition source. It's very good at it. After all that's what it's designed to do.

    • @guns-gas-diesel
      @guns-gas-diesel Год назад

      Pretty good saying but it should have said gasoline vapors.

  • @johnbroski1993
    @johnbroski1993 3 года назад +123

    USCSB hasn't posted a video in months so this will do I suppose.

    • @arvind-venkat
      @arvind-venkat 3 года назад +6

      Ma man.

    • @dixieinstrumental805
      @dixieinstrumental805 3 года назад +8

      I started with USCSB videos as well. For some reasion videos like this keep popping up on my feed and ai am not even out of high school. Guess J know where I will be working

    • @lgunderso2117
      @lgunderso2117 3 года назад +2

      Yeah I wonder what's up with their recent lack of posts...
      @dixie lol yup, I started there many years ago, I'm an electrical engineer designing auto assembly lines now and I look at things through a different lens than my coworkers. I think it has made our designs better and helped prevent injuries.

    • @FerroequinologistofColorado
      @FerroequinologistofColorado 3 года назад +8

      It was the USCSB that got me into these types of videos. I now watch WorkSafeBC videos and USCSB Videos

    • @jgavpercussion
      @jgavpercussion 3 года назад +6

      @@lgunderso2117 Trump administration cut their funding and basically gutted the agency

  • @TachiTekmo
    @TachiTekmo 3 года назад +150

    Now you'll understand why you must fill your jerry-can on the ground, and not the bed of your truck.

    • @lakecityransom
      @lakecityransom 2 года назад +23

      This info needs to be taught more. I had no idea the fuel itself brings in charge buildup under improper conditions.

    • @blatherskite9601
      @blatherskite9601 Год назад +1

      @@lakecityransom I learned something new today, too.

    • @ONTHEEDGEFRED
      @ONTHEEDGEFRED Год назад

      @@lakecityransom I didn't realize this either, very informative video right here.

    • @sed6
      @sed6 Год назад +1

      My plastic Jerry can also?

    • @marks6663
      @marks6663 Год назад +1

      what difference does it make? you fuel your car with the same hose, but the car is not grounded since it is sitting on four rubber mounts.

  • @Starchface
    @Starchface 3 года назад +156

    Tanker drivers should have a means of routinely testing continuity between the tank, nozzles and ground. It should be standard procedure to check it before pumping. It would only take a couple of seconds. And that splash-loading of gasoline is asking for trouble. Gasoline vapours in particular are highly explosive (the liquid itself doesn't burn).
    Some fun safety tips when you're at the gas station: touch the nozzle to a metal area of your vehicle before putting it in the filler hole so that any spark that occurs is far from gasoline vapours. Ensure that the metal nozzle is contacting the filling tube, which it does by design. And don't shuffle around in your shoes or get in the car while filling. That produces large static charges which may not dissipate quickly. Mobile phones do not cause explosions. That was a myth resulting from people who get in and out of the car while filling, often with a phone in hand.

    • @stephencell2290
      @stephencell2290 3 года назад +4

      They can check the system, I bet the company doesn’t know how. You’re right , very easily avoidable.

    • @stephencell2290
      @stephencell2290 3 года назад +1

      Tge myth is older than cell phones actually. I heard the myth in Georgia in the early 90s. With so many culprits.

    • @NicholasLittlejohn
      @NicholasLittlejohn 3 года назад +4

      Electric cars have none of these dangers

    • @vtwinbreed
      @vtwinbreed 2 года назад +3

      Fuel equipment on single vehicle tanker trucks are so old and antiquated, a lot of the hardware used was made back in the 60's and 70s and the designs never changed.

    • @dustinandtarynwolfe5540
      @dustinandtarynwolfe5540 2 года назад +33

      @@NicholasLittlejohn no they just have lithium batteries which react violently with water vapor in the air

  • @Kuzyapso
    @Kuzyapso 2 года назад +21

    As a truck driver considering getting into hazmat you definitely changed my mind

    • @georgetsokanis3542
      @georgetsokanis3542 Год назад +2

      I was a propane delivery driver. It's alot different than gasoline or oil. Cleaner,easier to load and discharge. It's a hard job nonetheless.

    • @JohnSmith-cf4gn
      @JohnSmith-cf4gn Год назад +3

      I've hauled acetylene, ammonia, hydrogen, poison gas, nitroglycerin, and swinging meat but I've never hauled gasoline or propane, too dangerous.

    • @kcook8119
      @kcook8119 Год назад +2

      Oh don't be a pansy. You hook up properly and no problems.

    • @LEGENDOFSEVENN
      @LEGENDOFSEVENN Год назад

      ​@@kcook8119 exactly 😂

    • @grootsyt
      @grootsyt 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@JohnSmith-cf4gnhow is nitroglycerin any safer?

  • @ichbindarren
    @ichbindarren 3 года назад +42

    I worked with fuels for 6 years. You NEVER top fill a tank. Especially a low flashpoint fuel like gasoline.

    • @jerrykinnin7941
      @jerrykinnin7941 Год назад +1

      I load allot of alcohol it's top loaded in a rack there's a cap comes down over the manhole product goes in one hose vapor comes out another. I've not hauled Gasoline or Diesel yet.

    • @invictusbp1prop143
      @invictusbp1prop143 Год назад +1

      After working for the largest fuel carrier in the area, but on the fleet side, not as a driver, I know about how all the equipment works but didn’t run it myself so often. But outer guys would top load diesel when necessary. Really not a big deal if you make sure you’re bonded. But gassed to scare me. And the guys never too loaded it.

    • @mcrangelvlogs9396
      @mcrangelvlogs9396 10 месяцев назад

      @@invictusbp1prop143diesel doesnt have dangerous gases like gasoline does you can unload diesel just with the favor open no hose needed but to unload gasoline thats another story you have to use the vapor hose or the cars hot exhaust will ignite the gases in the station or near by

    • @brianskinner5212
      @brianskinner5212 9 месяцев назад

      There are many oil well that are loaded through the top with a 5 foot long 4 inch hose. You have to ground the truck though.

    • @brianskinner5212
      @brianskinner5212 9 месяцев назад

      @@mcrangelvlogs9396 when unloading air is sucked into the tank so there are minimal fumes

  • @PlasmaCoolantLeak
    @PlasmaCoolantLeak Год назад +5

    Former USAF POL here. One of the first things we learned in tech school was the hazard of static electricity.

  • @TheAwkwardBanana
    @TheAwkwardBanana 3 года назад +30

    That poor, poor driver.

  • @seanb3516
    @seanb3516 3 года назад +47

    As a CSO I watch all sub-trades perform their tasks. I may not know how they do their job however I do know what good work practices look like.
    It is this sort of intuitiveness that alerts you to someone working unsafely and trying to cut corners. It's either stupid workers or stupid SWP's.
    This video presented some new technical information regarding safe fuel transfer that I was unaware of and that actually surprises me.
    I hope the 'end' of the Pandemic will bring forth a newly revived WSBC. I am certain that work will increase exponentially for the summer of 2021. Thx!

  • @arbitrage2141
    @arbitrage2141 2 года назад +16

    I work on a ranch and we deal with fuel all the time. Mostly diesel but all of this and other videos are good to know about.

  • @zen4men
    @zen4men Год назад +6

    With governments everywhere thrusting tyranny in people's faces harder and harder each year - 2020 to 2022 has been a real eyeopener - your video is a refreshing change of tone from the horrible and strident demands of 'Comply or get shafted!' we have here in the UK.
    Your technique REALLY works, as everything you say is so gentle, so obviously true, and so obviously caring - without one word of threat.
    Looking back on my working life, there were several moments where, had circumstances been slightly different, someone could have been injured or killed. ...... I was lucky, took note, and did my best to do better from then on.
    Your videos are impressive - keep up the good work!

  • @gov2260
    @gov2260 Год назад +3

    I am a fuel tanker driver of 15 years. When top loading like this guy you are supposed to lean the metal nozzle on the metal rim of the tank as you fill it for this reason. Back in the 80s and the 90s top loading was a common practice. Now it's very rare and most of the newer drivers are not trained how to do it properly. When I first started, I helped pump out an overturned tanker on a cold night I already had a small amount of Diesel at the bottom of the tank as I splash loaded the 87unl on top I could clearly see blue pops of static electricity in the tank, The static went away soon after and I surmised the static was due to the relative gravity between the two fuels being so different. As the small amount of Diesel turned to 87unl the static I witnessed also went away. Stay safe stay grounded ;)

    • @markpolice3585
      @markpolice3585 Год назад

      Exactly. I top load when we're working hurricanes and I always touch the nozzle to the some part of the opening.

  • @chuckg2016
    @chuckg2016 Год назад +2

    Your site is one of the best sources of solid information on the web.

  • @injusticeanywherethreatens4810
    @injusticeanywherethreatens4810 3 года назад +28

    This is one reason why the trades are dying. Safety !
    I've read about numerous people who died while working in the trades.

    . The employer didn't provide a physics specialist on site or hammer into the mind of the worker the importance of potential differences in the voltages of the truck's equipment.
    Heck Im a chemistry major and I have just learned From this video that gasoline can create a charge buildup from rubbing against the rubber of the tube and the metal of the nozzle.
    And yet they expect a layman to know all of this? Ha!

    • @tashalynn29
      @tashalynn29 3 года назад +1

      I just learned from it that splashing gas isn't good either

    • @leftysheppey
      @leftysheppey 3 года назад +2

      You can get hydrostatic charges in water. Are you that surprised, as a chemistry major, that it can happen in other liquids?

    • @Arnond35
      @Arnond35 3 года назад +1

      Yeah, i have a minor in chemistry and i just learned that too 😞

    • @oldgamerkatt9829
      @oldgamerkatt9829 Год назад

      I work for this company and it is hammered into us about Using grounding and bonding. If you are caught not using it, you are written up and possibly suspended.

  • @chrismayer3919
    @chrismayer3919 2 года назад +5

    …And people wonder why I’m so paranoid about gasoline/fuel systems 😰

  • @MickCone
    @MickCone Год назад +1

    I was MMS/EOD, remembering all the things we were supposed to do, and didn't, makes me shudder today. It's a wonder any of us came home.

  • @kaischluter2081
    @kaischluter2081 Год назад +1

    This video provides a great overview and very detailed explanation about the too often understimated dangers of electrostatic charges during loading operations. Thank you @WorkSafeBC!
    And please keep in mind, that this isn't only true for tankers but also for containers like IBC, big bags or barrels. As presented in the video, the only way to prevent this danger is by effectively bond and ground every conductive part of the whole system.
    Therefore, monitored grounding devices like the TIMM EKX-4 which can verify the gorunding status and send a signal to the control station, must be taken into consideration!

  • @petcatznz
    @petcatznz 3 года назад +6

    Hindsight is a wonderful tool. All who handle such volatile substances should watch videos such as this one, forewarned is forearmed.

  • @christianhaley4334
    @christianhaley4334 3 года назад +29

    who tf would've thought loading gasoline into a trailer generates static electricity wow incredibly dangerous and incredibly unsafe for them, training is clearly lacking :(

    • @dethray1000
      @dethray1000 Год назад

      every tanker driver knows this--it is a risk--99 percent of the time you use grounding--sometimes your doing the 1 percent and it is a problem--i know of a guy who was using a broom to sweep snow off the top of his trailer and a static spark from the broom let it up--he closed the dome lid to put it out

  • @Aranimda
    @Aranimda 3 года назад +11

    It is better to keep oxygen separated from fuel vapors. You can't avoid all sparks and other ignition sources all the time.

  • @FFEMTB08
    @FFEMTB08 3 года назад +30

    Why would he top load? Sounds so much more difficult than ground loading. And clearly more dangerous.

    • @hanhphuc166
      @hanhphuc166 3 года назад +2

      The grounding system wasn't installed at the new location

    • @juliogonzo2718
      @juliogonzo2718 3 года назад +9

      He would have been top loading to visually ensure the compartment was not overfilled. Quantity in a partially filled compartment is going to fluctuate with temperature. Also if the compartment has been filled several times without being completely emptied, you could easily have hundreds of litres more or less than what you have calculated on top of volume fluctuations from temperature. When you bottom load at a big terminal the compartments have to be empty. This is to ensure the compartment cannot be overfilled. you drain contents of loading pipe into a pail with compartment internal valve open to make sure the compartment is empty. You then program the rack to load less quantity than the compartment can safely hold. In a smaller bulk plant situation where you normally top load it does not have to be empty and often deliveries are to small tanks, as opposed to a gas station with large tanks where they order a quantity and that is what the truck is loaded with.

    • @kentpaterson6218
      @kentpaterson6218 Год назад

      He had to meter off a volume even though there are levels inside the tank all fuel is temperature corrected. This is done all over the place unfortunately.

  • @captainsquarters7099
    @captainsquarters7099 Год назад +2

    I do this exact thing for a living and we don’t have any grounding while delivering to customers such as farms.this has given me a lot to think about.

    • @michaeldelio1870
      @michaeldelio1870 11 месяцев назад

      Hey captain, do you deliver gasoline, or fuel oil? I deliver heating oil, and never heard of a disaster such as this. It is an eye opening video.

  • @xygomorphic44
    @xygomorphic44 2 года назад +12

    I used to fuel planes, and the first thing you do before you open any values is to connect the grounding clamp to a metal part of the plane. Ever fuel truck and fuel system is supposed to have one.
    It's a simple, mundane task, but it prevents explosions like this.

  • @Ramiiam
    @Ramiiam 2 года назад

    This is the channel to unwind after a bad day at the office.

  • @3bydacreekside
    @3bydacreekside 3 года назад +6

    This is my dose of chemical and industrial safety after uscsb hasn't uploaded in months...

  • @jurgenkuhlmann9194
    @jurgenkuhlmann9194 3 года назад +11

    Shake hands with danger!

  • @thebaldeagle655
    @thebaldeagle655 2 года назад +12

    Another factor that was barely mentioned is that he was alone. When transfering fuel someone has to be on top to ensure you don't overflow the compartment. By only having 1 person, this resulted in the need to top load. Had there been 2 people it would have been easier to hook your hoses up to bottom load this ensuring a bonded and grounded system. I also find it hard to believe that the transfer home wasn't wire lined and bonded as they all are required to be. This alone is a catastrophe waiting to happen!

    • @danielrose1392
      @danielrose1392 Год назад

      Some lack of grounding when delivering to a private costumer should not happen but will definitely happen occasionally, but a lack of grounding at a base they are operating from is even more disturbing

    • @invictusbp1prop143
      @invictusbp1prop143 Год назад +1

      How do you figure it requires 2 people to transfer thru the loading head? I have no idea why anyone would choose to top load gasoline unless something was broken preventing a transfer thru the manifold or if the equipment was just not set up right. But one man can just pop the done lid on the compartment connect loading heads, open valves, and pump from one to the other. Where is the necessity of a second?

  • @3613jeremy
    @3613jeremy 3 года назад +6

    Bulk gasoline transfers should always have a sealed vapor recovery system connected that was the biggest issue with this accident

    • @juliogonzo2718
      @juliogonzo2718 3 года назад

      It is not a requirement to recover vapours where i live in Canada during delivery or loading. I think some terminals have vapour recovery during loading, but the imperial oil terminal I loaded at did not, it just vented out the pipe at the back

  • @06fz1000
    @06fz1000 Год назад +4

    When I worked at refueling operations at an airport that was the number one thing you always did very first... Connect your ground

    • @guns-gas-diesel
      @guns-gas-diesel Год назад +1

      And disconnecting it is the last thing you do.

  • @UtilityPro
    @UtilityPro 3 года назад +26

    I love how matter of fact these videos are; it's like Joe Friday of Dragnet; narrating the chain of events that lead to the incident.

    • @catlady8324
      @catlady8324 3 года назад +1

      Just the facts, ma’am.

  • @6stringgunner511
    @6stringgunner511 3 года назад +20

    I drove a tractor tanker-trailer for a major gasoline company for 25 yrs.
    The drivers performance was lacking from the word go!
    He should have NEVER been on the top side, pumping off.
    Big EPA violation right there!
    (Fumes were not contained)
    Plus, the static charge possibilities!!!
    ALWAYS pump off or gravity drop the fuel using the vapor recovery system!!!

    • @hlk466
      @hlk466 3 года назад

      I'm considering driving a similar fuel tanker (same as exploded one) so how dangerous would you consider these jobs if proper procedure is followed? I'm talking loading and accidents. This video has me thinking twice

    • @NicholasLittlejohn
      @NicholasLittlejohn 3 года назад +3

      @@hlk466 Very dangerous for low pay. Gas fumes cause cancer.

    • @juliogonzo2718
      @juliogonzo2718 3 года назад

      There is no EPA in Canada. I have operated a smaller bulk tanker like this where our company bulk plant had a top loading rack. You are frequently loading on top of partially loaded compartments as you are making multiple smaller deliveries off a compartment as opposed to dumping the whole thing into an underground tank at a gas station. The larger terminals where you bottom load you can only load an empty compartment and have to open the internal and pail drain first. This is obviously so you don't overfill. I guess you could pump the whole thing off then reload it bottom, but this would cut into the 10-20 deliveries you had to do that day. A dip chart for each compartment would likely be the only way you could safely bottom load a partial compartment as thermal expansion would throw any calculations of dispensed product off, as well as discrepancy due to loading a partial compartment. It was not unusual to pump a few hundred litres more or less out of a compartment than your calculations state should be in it. You would never notice it gravity dropping, but you do pumping off through a meter

    • @avsystem3142
      @avsystem3142 2 года назад +1

      This was in Canada, completely different responsible agencies. In the U.S. workplace safety is the purview of OSHA, not the EPA.

    • @dethray1000
      @dethray1000 Год назад

      there is no epa requirement for controling vapor except at the refineries-states have different requirements-california is the toughest--when your pumping most do not have a vapor hookup to a tank your pumping into-i hated pumping gasoline,very very dangerous

  • @fred5149
    @fred5149 3 года назад +19

    Rest in peace sir ..I am sorry you had to perish this way ..you worked just like me

  • @adamt5986
    @adamt5986 3 года назад +19

    Good video. My knee jerk reaction is it is the employee’s life is on the line so therefore they should have the the knowledge and process to do the job safely. However this shows there are some components of this system that are “hidden” and need to the validated outside of the employee’s control. I hope the employee’s dependents were fairly compensated.

    • @nickmartin1527
      @nickmartin1527 2 года назад +1

      pays $15 an hour at best

    • @1800s
      @1800s Год назад

      $36hr here in So-cal

  • @likydsplit8483
    @likydsplit8483 Год назад +1

    “The more we read about static electricity, the more scared we got. So we stopped reading about it.” - Red Adair.

  • @thebestofj.fraley
    @thebestofj.fraley 3 года назад +18

    We watched a video in my fire academy class about an incident that happened in Yuma AZ. In the 70's a rail tanker bleve occurred. 13 firefighters found out the hard way not to put out a tanker fire. They found half of the rail car 2 miles away, but never found the bodies. All of them were vaporized. That film is shown in every fire academy world wide. I'm surprised that didn't happen to this guy but he still died nonetheless. I would rather go quickly not suffering like him 🙏🙏🙏🙏

    • @mediocreman2
      @mediocreman2 Год назад

      That was in Kingman Arizona, not Yuma. You can find the video on RUclips.

    • @trueilarim
      @trueilarim Год назад

      The video you talked can be found here in youtube. It is titled ”BLEVE Video from the 1970’s”

    • @invictusbp1prop143
      @invictusbp1prop143 Год назад

      Not suffering? How do you figure that? That explosion was minimal. Not like an explosion that involves a large amount of fuel under pressure. The fuel was in the compartment with an open dome lid. The fire killed that man. Burning to death isn’t quite my idea of a pleasant way to go.

    • @NathanM4A1
      @NathanM4A1 Год назад +1

      @@invictusbp1prop143 I was seconds away from crucifying you for your poor reading comprehension when I re-read the original comment and saw that the OP made a grammatical error. His last sentence, read exactly how he typed it, is read as him wanting to also go quickly and not suffering, like the guy involved in this incident. However, I'm pretty certain he did not mean that. He missed a comma, between "quickly", and "not". Typed out properly, it would be "I would rather go quickly, not suffering like him". That gives the sentence the meaning he was going for. So he definitely fucked up by not having the comma, but you also kinda fucked up by not interpreting his actual meaning. It took me only a few seconds to work out what he actually meant. While non-existent punctuation marks can be the difference between an English sentence being interpreted one way, or another, this sentence, unlike some in English which cannot be seen the other way without the punctuation marks, can be easily seen in the two different meanings, regardless of whether they punctuation is there or not. But this is an important lesson on why proper punctuation and grammar are important. Stay in school kids.

    • @765kvline
      @765kvline Год назад

      The video is here (among others): ruclips.net/video/03kKQS8KzRs/видео.html

  • @DVincentW
    @DVincentW 3 года назад +17

    Save a life... great info, and sad the guy didnt make it.

  • @ghostsoul529
    @ghostsoul529 2 года назад +5

    I had no idea that a spark created by static electricity can be created so easily

    • @runsolo7418
      @runsolo7418 Год назад +1

      The colder it is, the dryer the air is, the easier to induce static charge. So up here in Canada, getting out of your car during winter you automatically have a static charge. When you grab the fuel nozzle to fuel your vehicle, touch your bare hand/fingers to the stainless steel hose fitting for a three seconds to dissipate the static charge, before you even put the fuel nozzle into the vehicle filler pipe. If you are loading a vehicle and the the fuel vapor ignites, never, ever remove the nozzle. Leave the nozzle in the vehicle. Stop squeezing the lever, to stop any fuel flowing. On the fuel station, depending on the model, either press the on/off paddle with your hand, "it is at the top of the pocket where you removed the fuel nozzle. With the pump off and no fuel flowing the fire will burn the remaining oxygen in the vehicles fuel tank inside ten seconds and the fire will go out on it's own.

  • @Aprilsraven629
    @Aprilsraven629 Год назад +2

    Not mentioned here but static electricity can occur during pumping fuel into underground or above ground tanks during thunderstorms...I worked for a Petrol Station and all pumping operations ceased during storms...you could feel the fizzle on the bowsers, nozzles and in the air it was frightening

  • @ZorbaTheDutch
    @ZorbaTheDutch Год назад +2

    The company's behavior comes across as criminally negligent.

  • @curbyourshi1056
    @curbyourshi1056 2 года назад +2

    RIP Worker.

  • @Livinlivin836
    @Livinlivin836 2 года назад +19

    I would gladly donate to this channel if weekly videos like this came out. Would donate even more if daily videos came out. These videos crucial.

    • @SergeantExtreme
      @SergeantExtreme Год назад

      I mean, there's a limit to how many of these incidents occur. Canada is a fairly crazy place, but I'm pretty sure a fuel tanker truck doesn't blow up on a daily basis up nort'.

    • @jaquigreenlees
      @jaquigreenlees Год назад +1

      Every Canadian in BC does donate to this channel, it is a government agency so taxes pay for it.

    • @allanj4576
      @allanj4576 Год назад +1

      Donate?! This video was produced by a branch of the provincial government. No need to donate, they take our money through ridiculous taxes.

    • @oliverwilson11
      @oliverwilson11 Год назад +1

      @@allanj4576
      And we're all glad they do! They are giving the whole world excellent content for free 😀

  • @mediocreman2
    @mediocreman2 Год назад +1

    The sad thing is it sounds like he might not have been educated on the dangers involved with static. The company failed to educate and that's scary.

  • @JumbalayahJihad
    @JumbalayahJihad 3 года назад +14

    I used to work as an Aircraft Fueler at the age of 19 and once fueled a 737 but forgot to ground my truck to it beforehand because it was departing within 10 minutes of arriving at the gate. The company I worked for used shoddy fueling equipment from the late 80's early 90's that routinely failed safety protocols and inspections and PPE (minus a reflective vest) was virtually nonexistent. Had things gone awry, that one time I forgot to ground could've easily killed me and I would guarantee that company would try to put all of the blame on a 19 year old kid for forgetting to bonding to the plane (as they did when one of their managers crashed their 10K into my 6k but then shifted the blame onto me because he was a manager and couldn't do any wrong).
    Moral of the story, work for a company that actually gives a shit about their worker's safety by not cutting corners where it counts.

    • @vikkimcdonough6153
      @vikkimcdonough6153 2 года назад

      On the plus side, Jet A (aka kerosene) is a lot less of an explosion hazard than gasoline (lower vapor pressure), so forgetting to electrically bond truck to nozzle to plane is _somewhat_ less unsafe than with gas, especially when it's cold out.
      (That's a big part of why we use kerosene for jet fuel instead of gasoline; gasoline in the huge bulk quantities needed for fuelling big jetliners would be insanely dangerous to do routinely.)

    • @mediocreman2
      @mediocreman2 Год назад

      If you forgot to follow the procedure, and the shoddy equipment was working perfectly at that time, then yeah it's your fault.

  • @MrOramato
    @MrOramato Год назад

    Thank You so much. I grew up in a commercial industrial construction family business. I knew about static dangers of course but I made assumptions that transfer hoses would auto ground, like plugging in our 10 gauge extension cords. I knew the company color coding that indicated the last date the grounding was check by our safety engineer (my brother). I likely day dreamed during the fuel safety, but I don’t understand how I passed the test. Anyway, great warning for up and coming workers (I’m retired).

  • @AZMarine513
    @AZMarine513 3 года назад +4

    Very good video. Sharing this with my team. We move Jet A only but still very relevant.

  • @abigaillane94
    @abigaillane94 2 года назад +7

    Would he have been less injured if he had been wearing the recommend PPE? I’m curious if it would have saved him or if this was going to be a fatal accident no matter the protection equipment. Seems pretty unsurvivable to me 🥺

    • @BetterCallSauS
      @BetterCallSauS 2 года назад +8

      I could see how goggles/face shield, fire retardant coveralls (which can be very effective), proper boots, gloves etc. could help protect his body. But if the flames burned his lungs and that's what killed him, then most PPE would be useless at that point. He probably never wore it much and was used to working alone and unsupervised. May he rest in peace.

    • @saxongreen78
      @saxongreen78 Год назад

      He was also thrown to the ground and sprayed with burning petrol...the only measure that has any real value is PREVENTION.

  • @JimWhitaker
    @JimWhitaker 3 года назад +1

    Confuses "charge" and "voltage" in several places.

  • @alantorrance6153
    @alantorrance6153 Год назад

    When I was flying in light aircraft, the first step in refueling was to attach a ground wire to a lug on the aircraft. This was to ensure the aircraft was earthed. Then, and only then, was the cap on the tank opened, and the transfer hose lifted and the nozzle inserted into the filler or tank. The fueling equipment had inbuilt earthing wires, hence any static was safely discharged without any spark being possible.

  • @eprofessio
    @eprofessio Год назад +1

    Rest In Peace.

  • @SkillBuilder
    @SkillBuilder 10 месяцев назад

    Amazing lesson and the badly injured driver was still telling the guys to shut off the valves. Probably best that he didn't make it with those kind of burns. Years of pain.

  • @DonMayfield
    @DonMayfield 3 года назад

    2nd video on spark ignition of fire causing fatal injuries I have viewed in as many days. The other was the Hindenburg crash and fire.

  • @fyrman9092
    @fyrman9092 Год назад

    As an airport firefighter, one of the duties was to inspect the plane fueling trucks. The bonding wire was a common failure item because the insulation/coating had been worn off. Oddly enough, the NFPA fueling standards called for bonding and NOT grounding. By the cable insulation being worn away, and touching the ground, a ground is introduced creating an ignition source.
    Drivers would write up issues and the FBO would defer repairs until the airport authority and FAA inspector dropped the hammer.
    Good times...

  • @spacewolfjr
    @spacewolfjr 3 года назад +8

    2:39 Canadian Tire Multimeter? C'mon guys did Hulk Horgan take your Flukes away?!

    • @lgunderso2117
      @lgunderso2117 3 года назад +4

      LOL! As an EE I am dissapointed, but I think even a Canadian tire meter can accurately tell you if something is in the sub ohm or gigaohm range lol.

    • @erwinjoshuat1327
      @erwinjoshuat1327 2 года назад

      Hahaha you really made me laugh and embarrassed at the same time since I'm guilty as charged using a dirt cheap Chinese made DMMs at home since my boss don't let me take the Metrahits outside the Refinery that I'm working in. Maybe my boss is the Hulk Hogan/ boogie man of top end DMMs 😅

  • @dominichamel4685
    @dominichamel4685 Год назад +1

    We as workers, no matter the field we're in, are disposable if it costs the company money

  • @jeanhebert2130
    @jeanhebert2130 Год назад

    Thanks

  • @victorponce7238
    @victorponce7238 Год назад

    I didn't know this about static electricity coming from the fuel itself. Wow!
    Poor guy. He should've known about the grounding.

  • @nickelmickel4170
    @nickelmickel4170 3 года назад +3

    And they all went home and nobody went to jail.

  • @cp30none36
    @cp30none36 2 года назад

    Bonding and Grounding along with esd shoes would and proper labeling of hoses would have eliminated all static concerns.

  • @davej-r9153
    @davej-r9153 3 года назад +18

    So if those in a higher pay band had done there job the tanker driver would still be able to go home to his family.

    • @truckerpat3064
      @truckerpat3064 3 года назад +5

      The drivers know the risks. They are trained. I know, I am one.

    • @oldgamerkatt9829
      @oldgamerkatt9829 Год назад

      He did everything that he wasnt supposed to do and he paid the price for it

  • @vikkimcdonough6153
    @vikkimcdonough6153 2 года назад +1

    That tanker truck is in remarkably-good shape for having been in an explosion and fire.

  • @davidmetcalfe1076
    @davidmetcalfe1076 3 года назад +3

    Petrol vapour is heavier than air.Hence petrol vapour will travel along the ground.It would only need ignition to ignite.

    • @dethray1000
      @dethray1000 Год назад

      not true--depends on many factors--temp being the biggest

  • @spikenomoon
    @spikenomoon Год назад

    Crazy after being blown up he was still worried about turning it off.

  • @juanlemod
    @juanlemod Год назад

    I wanted to go into hauling petroleum and oil after four years of trucking, but I had no idea about bonding and grounding when transferring fuel. I wonder if these things are taught during training in the US?
    I’m confused, was the guy transferring diesel or gas from the rear tanker to the front tanker? They mentioned that he was transferring diesel from one of the tankers to his fuel tank for his tractor but then started talking about gasoline. The tractor this guy had was definitely running on diesel, as I saw that it had an 18-speed manual shifter in the cab. Maybe the tanker trailers he was pulling had different compartments for different fuels? The reason this is confusing is because diesel doesn’t combust easily unless under pressure. I think people say you can even extinguish an open flame with diesel, though I’m not going to test out that claim myself, lol.
    Now, I’m scared to fuel up my own Toyota Corolla at the gas station not knowing if the pumps are properly grounded and bonded, lol. Many people and businesses tend to overlook safety if it saves them time and or money. Maybe some gasoline owner did some maintenance and forgot to get one of the pumps bonded and grounded, or the person doing the maintenance didn’t bother to confirm it was bonded and grounded when finishing up?
    It’s fascinating that an electrical charge can be built up from mere splashing!!!

  • @geoffreypiltz271
    @geoffreypiltz271 Год назад +1

    Without knowing about bonding and grounding I still wouldn't have used top loading for gasoline as I know that this would have created a dangerously combustible atmosphere in and above the tanker.

  • @rosswyllie9242
    @rosswyllie9242 Год назад +5

    I had experience in all road tankers at the end of the day it's up to the driver to know what to check and do after all the driver is supposed to be the most Experienced. I'm 69 and retired now and survived with all my body parts intact

  • @raymondleggs5508
    @raymondleggs5508 3 года назад +2

    the burned shoe by the hose sends chills up my spine

  • @renneedwards9826
    @renneedwards9826 3 года назад +1

    Oh wow 😯
    Safety first 😔💯

  • @richbattaglia5350
    @richbattaglia5350 Год назад

    With every advancement, there is advanced upkeep. Sad that we still have to learn things the hard way before necessary change can be implemented to operate our modern world.

  • @user-up4ui2gh2b
    @user-up4ui2gh2b 7 месяцев назад

    This is an excellent video!

  • @KevinFromTheOffice
    @KevinFromTheOffice 3 года назад +5

    Yay! I’ve been waiting for more of this

  • @jackw.3480
    @jackw.3480 3 года назад

    Back in the mid 80s a propane truck exploded on NYS hwy killing the driver and buring a mile on the thruway shoulder.

  • @am4484
    @am4484 Год назад +1

    "Safety First" is often all talk

  • @RobB-vz2vo
    @RobB-vz2vo Год назад

    There's no interlock to prevent fuel flow if there is a break in the bonding cct? That's ridiculous.

  • @chriswells1440
    @chriswells1440 3 года назад +4

    A smart Company Safety Guy that knows how much things could be a hazard could have prevented this. Usually a Safety Guy looks like a creep. But he's the smart protector for people and the company. A cable grounded to the nozzle to the body of the tanker then the tanker grounded to the ground with a copper rod would have worked. Just very sad. Some rules seem dumb but they work. Refresher safety videos always.

  • @nikerailfanningttm9046
    @nikerailfanningttm9046 2 года назад

    I like how this shows the shoes of the worker who literally blown out of his shoes. This gives a whole new meaning of "BLOW YOUR SHOES OFF" but reversed.

  • @americandissident76
    @americandissident76 2 года назад

    Could a rubber lining on the lid also deal with the problem?

  • @andya2665
    @andya2665 Год назад

    You should do a vid on the Doxol Propane explosion in Kingman AZ July 5, 1973.

  • @chuckcuttress2991
    @chuckcuttress2991 Год назад

    While in Vietnam myself and three other guys were outside one of our tents just below us was a bell h13 that was being refueled from a fuel truck by one guy when all of a sudden a big explosion and the rear tire wheel and axel was heading for us and stopped just before hitting us there was no fire the poor guy doing the fueling came running down the hill with outstretched arms where he was met by helpers apparently there was a flash fire that we didn't see burned him bad and melted the plexiglass of the h13 he probably didn't ground the truck

  • @rickhatesmisleadia7101
    @rickhatesmisleadia7101 11 месяцев назад

    I drove fuel truck back in the 90's and when I was trained no one told me about how a static charge builds up but I was told to ground the truck anytime I was fueling it up. I'm now seeing how many times I risked my life when I decided not to ground the truck because I was only getting a few hundred litres of gas. Typically I never carried gas as I worked for the UFA which is all farmers so 95% of them only took diesel fuel which is far less dangerous than gas.

  • @tomnapier1108
    @tomnapier1108 Год назад

    as soon as I saw the start of this it was clear there was not earth from the trailer to the truck bonding is a standard procedure
    sadly this went wrong very badly and should not have happened however these videos help hopefully ensure this does never happen again as someone now does not have a father or a husband

  • @hamentaschen
    @hamentaschen Год назад

    "The sea was angry that day my friends, like an old man trying to send back soup in a deli."

  • @arayabuchichi3798
    @arayabuchichi3798 3 года назад +1

    Seems the equipment is not grounded correctly RIP 🪦 🙏 💐

  • @geomodelrailroader
    @geomodelrailroader 3 года назад

    gas can explode if it is exposed to air several things went wrong in this accident. 1. the tanker was not grounded and the driver did not have a static rod which is required by law, 2. the driver let his engine idol creating a static charge, 3. the driver was splash loading hazmat which you don't do with gas, and 4. the driver was wearing the wrong gear to do this transfer. To avoid this when you arrive at a station or terminal you ground your truck and you lockout tag out your truck and make sure the engine is off also if you are transferring hazmat do not splash load only load it from the bottom to prevent sparks.

    • @dethray1000
      @dethray1000 Год назад +2

      i have tanker tansfered many many times--the only way to run the pump is to run the motor--gasoline was top loaded for many years,you have to ground,static is created by product flow--the big hazard when pumping is if you spill the vapor can get to the motor creating a fire--millions of transfers exactly like this are done every year--his luck ran out-you only know partly what your talking about--did tanker for 40 years--its dangerous but a highway crash is the most dangerous part

  • @lowcatalina6638
    @lowcatalina6638 Год назад

    I never see fuel trucks at gas stations using a ground strap. This really makes you wonder

    • @1800s
      @1800s Год назад

      As soon as you connect vapor recovery hose to the ground tank connector you are grounded.

  • @kiwikeith7633
    @kiwikeith7633 Год назад

    If this resulted from Static? then was the bonding leads checked serviceable? Were they used? if not then I wonder how negligent people get to be in control of fuel tanker operations.

  • @waynedyer3475
    @waynedyer3475 Год назад +3

    Unbelievable the company was that unsafe. Sorry it cost a man his life and effects many others. That was about as smart as looking for land mines with a hammer. RIP

  • @dustyflair
    @dustyflair Год назад

    Hell of a man worried about saving others as he is leaving this world!!! Apparently we lost ANOTHER real winner and family man!

  • @teeanahera8949
    @teeanahera8949 Год назад

    “Static electricity is invisible” I would have thought all electricity is invisible.

  • @TsunauticusIV
    @TsunauticusIV 3 года назад

    Poor fella 😔

  • @fredsalter1915
    @fredsalter1915 3 года назад

    Super sad. "Splash loading"??? That just sounds like disaster in and of itself.