@@DrixzyThePlumber IMO, this approach is not best practice, even if you did fix the issue... What if you fix the source of the spent gas fumes, but not entirely the CO? or what if there is a secondary CO leak? Human olfactory senses become desensitized by inhalation of CO (ansomia: smell blindness), which means, the more you expose yourself to it, the less you can accurately smell other things. So yeah you can do it that way, but your doctor would advise against it. Repetitive short-term exposure to CO can also cause long-term neurological and affective sequelae (google it)... and workers being exposed to it voluntarily like that is not OSHA compliant. Appropriate monitoring equipment to detect CO leaks and taking necessary actions to mitigate exposure if levels are above the 50ppm (PEL) are required by OSHA.
Great video, keep them coming!
Getting it done!
Isn’t carbon monoxide odorless?
@4Thug2Life0 yes but u can smell the burning natural gas witch emits carbon monoxide
@@DrixzyThePlumber IMO, this approach is not best practice, even if you did fix the issue... What if you fix the source of the spent gas fumes, but not entirely the CO? or what if there is a secondary CO leak? Human olfactory senses become desensitized by inhalation of CO (ansomia: smell blindness), which means, the more you expose yourself to it, the less you can accurately smell other things. So yeah you can do it that way, but your doctor would advise against it. Repetitive short-term exposure to CO can also cause long-term neurological and affective sequelae (google it)... and workers being exposed to it voluntarily like that is not OSHA compliant. Appropriate monitoring equipment to detect CO leaks and taking necessary actions to mitigate exposure if levels are above the 50ppm (PEL) are required by OSHA.