While it is possible to recover from very light, non-injurious exposure two or three good lung fulls of this and your lungs will be fried and you will die. In work training we were shown dash cam video of a law enforcement officer (LEO) who responded to a traffic accident involving a pick up pulling one of these tanks as a trailer. There was a white fog with a man laying on the ground. The LEO ran into the fog to try to rescue the man on the ground. His body mic picked up his coughing and wheezing. He never made it back to the police car and was found dead at the scene. There are lots of examples of people exposed in industry or refrigeration plants whose lungs were damaged so that they never fully recovered.
@cherrybaderry500 because your within permissible exposure. Your not breathing large concentrated amounts of it. 1 breath of a 5,000 ppm concentration of ammonia gas with put you into respiratory arrest. It's nothing to play with.
Don't be alarmed by those who never have been educated in the subject. Anyone can easily educate themselves we do live in the age of information. But let me do it for you. There's no long term health concerns from exposure to NH3. not true? Do the research
The problem is acute exposure. Once this is addressed, you don't have to fear long term effects, like growing a third eye or flippers. With a severe exposure, you will be injured or dead.
That might be true for very light, non-injurious exposure. Two or three good lung fulls of this and your lungs will be fried and you will die. In work training we were shown dash cam video of a law enforcement officer (LEO) who responded to a traffic accident involving a pick up pulling one of these tanks as a trailer. There was a white fog with a man laying on the ground. The LEO ran into the fog to try to rescue the man on the ground. His body mic picked up his coughing and wheezing. He never made it back to the police car and was found dead at the scene. There are lots of examples of people exposed in industry or refrigeration plants whose lungs were damaged so that they never fully recovered.
There's no long term effect because its short term effect is death. You may survive inhaling just a bit, but you're gonna have a bad time. Inhale a bit more, it's basically death sentence.
Got exposed to it today at work. Took my breath away and ran away upwind as fast as i could!
While it is possible to recover from very light, non-injurious exposure two or three good lung fulls of this and your lungs will be fried and you will die. In work training we were shown dash cam video of a law enforcement officer (LEO) who responded to a traffic accident involving a pick up pulling one of these tanks as a trailer. There was a white fog with a man laying on the ground. The LEO ran into the fog to try to rescue the man on the ground. His body mic picked up his coughing and wheezing. He never made it back to the police car and was found dead at the scene. There are lots of examples of people exposed in industry or refrigeration plants whose lungs were damaged so that they never fully recovered.
I breathe anhydrous ammonia all the time at work, have been for about 10 years. I’m fine
@cherrybaderry500 because your within permissible exposure. Your not breathing large concentrated amounts of it. 1 breath of a 5,000 ppm concentration of ammonia gas with put you into respiratory arrest. It's nothing to play with.
This was shown to be not real and to be a training video.
Thanks for this video! I learned something new.
I have been told to run cross wind from a release
Thank you!
This video started with an anti-vape announcement..so i cant take anything from that moment serious at all...its likely just as absiurd
I can assure you this is not absurd!
-28°F = -33℃
Don't be alarmed by those who never have been educated in the subject. Anyone can easily educate themselves we do live in the age of information. But let me do it for you. There's no long term health concerns from exposure to NH3. not true? Do the research
The problem is acute exposure. Once this is addressed, you don't have to fear long term effects, like growing a third eye or flippers. With a severe exposure, you will be injured or dead.
That might be true for very light, non-injurious exposure. Two or three good lung fulls of this and your lungs will be fried and you will die. In work training we were shown dash cam video of a law enforcement officer (LEO) who responded to a traffic accident involving a pick up pulling one of these tanks as a trailer. There was a white fog with a man laying on the ground. The LEO ran into the fog to try to rescue the man on the ground. His body mic picked up his coughing and wheezing. He never made it back to the police car and was found dead at the scene. There are lots of examples of people exposed in industry or refrigeration plants whose lungs were damaged so that they never fully recovered.
There's no long term effect because its short term effect is death.
You may survive inhaling just a bit, but you're gonna have a bad time. Inhale a bit more, it's basically death sentence.
Ammonia is the best Covid medicine on the market lol
Lot of fear mongering going on here.
Hardly so. Anhydrous ammonia is very dangerous. The advice is not fear mongering.