Fendall Pure Flow 1000 Emergency Eyewash Station Training Video English | Honeywell Safety
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 14 май 2024
- Installation and usage training video for the Fendall Pure Flow 1000 Emergency Eyewash Station by Honeywell Safety Products.
Visit our blog: hwll.co/hisblog
Subscribe on RUclips: ruclips.net/user/Honeywel...
Like us on Facebook: / honeywellsafety
Follow us on Twitter: / honeywellsafety
Find out about careers at Honeywell: hwll.co/LinkedInCareers
Honeywell is inventing technologies that address some of the world’s toughest challenges in energy efficiency, clean energy generation, safety and security, globalization and customer productivity. With approximately 110,000 employees worldwide, including more than 18,000 engineers and scientists, we have an unrelenting focus on performance, quality, delivery, value and technology in everything we make and do.
We are building a world that’s safer and more secure, more comfortable and energy efficient, more innovative and productive. We are Honeywell.
/ honeywell - Наука
you saved me from getting fired
Same lol
Is the solution considered has waste? How does ones dispose of the solution when drained?
The rinse solution would not be considered hazardous waste. It would be over 99% saline solution with miniscule trace of whatever was rinsed from the eyes.
I believe in the video it say to just dispose of the waste water down a drain where plain water is regularly disposed down.
Definitely hazardous waste.
That’s why you rinse your eyes with it in an emergency.
Then again, you’re probably referring to the USED solution, which could be the perfect breeding ground for antibiotic-resistant strains of the bacteria causing “Pink Eye”
Extreme caution is warranted.
How you turn this shit off
You can't. Once it is discharged that is it. Must be replaced.
@@Vers23 thank you
@peepeepoopoovdbhxvbcc6683 actually it is possible. You have to cinch down the black tabs that slide over the spouts - the white ones in the video are what hold it on and when you pull the handle down to activate it rips them off. If you use a little bit of super glue on the same ones while it is ziptied up to stop the flow of water it should work. Of course thats not recommended but it would work.
@@imgrindin I believe we ultimately ended up shutting it off using some zipties. Thankfully my managers where, uhh, understanding and I'm on good terms with everyone as long as I don't let my intrusive thoughts convince me to pull the big plastic handle again for no reason
@@peepeepoopoovdbhxvbcc6683 lets just say thats how its shut off right now and when the building is opened at 5 am monday the superglue is gonns be tested on the white straps.
god speed sir!
This thing is a piece of crap. We have one at work that had to get used and you can’t even get your face close enough to the dispenser for it to really flush is eyes and the weak as stream that comes out. We had to rush him over to the bathroom to properly flush his eyes out. All this thing really is is a wall decoration to satisfy OSHAs requirements. If it was me I’d have sued this company for providing a junk product. What else do you expect from the medical industry though.