Kenny Phillips
Final Approach
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- Jul 29, 2018
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Kenny Phillips
At least it turned out OK for this guy.
http://www.kathrynsreport.com/
http://www.kathrynsreport.com/
Wow, glad it turned out okay for the pilot. What is a sternal rub?
thanks, seems a little aggressive though in this case, no? Why not pull him out of the airplane and place on the ground. Chances are he would have came to once he was removed from the carbon dioxide environmentpainful stimulas
thanks, seems a little aggressive though in this case, no? Why not pull him out of the airplane and place on the ground. Chances are he would have came to once he was removed from the carbon dioxide environment
It’s amazing how noxious stimuli can arouse a somnolent/narcotized individual to more effective respirations, at least transiently. Never had anyone complain after full arousal - they don’t seem to remember.thanks, seems a little aggressive though in this case, no? Why not pull him out of the airplane and place on the ground. Chances are he would have came to once he was removed from the carbon dioxide environment
Neither have I...Never had anyone complain after full arousal...
It was a 208, turbine Caravan. But exactly zero airplanes are "sealed"; even pressurized ones (the Caravan is not) have outflow valves. No airplane can explode unless the pressure rises more quickly than it can dissipate; that's not happening with CO2 sublimation. I'd think that if he got into the air, he may have been OK. Or become a smoking hole.If dry ice is confined and pressure not released it will result in a explosion due to pressure buildup. Not really sure how you would transport dry ice in a 206 without some sort of ventilation system. I worked in a factory that used dry ice pellets to keep sealants, rivets etc. frozen and some idiot would take a plastic 2-liter bottle and put a little dry ice in the bottle and cap it. A REALLY big boom would result. If management caught you doing trying this prank you would be fired.
It’s amazing how noxious stimuli can arouse a somnolent/narcotized individual to more effective respirations, at least transiently. Never had anyone complain after full arousal - they don’t seem to remember.
Except after four hours. Then you must seek medical attention... Never had anyone complain after full arousal ...
....or not, personal choice. Don’t believe everything you hear on TV.Except after four hours. Then you must seek medical attention.
Neither have I...
- they don’t seem to remember.
.....and I’m really surprised they can ship CO2 like that - and that this hasn’t happened before.
It was a 208, turbine Caravan. But exactly zero airplanes are "sealed"; even pressurized ones (the Caravan is not) have outflow valves. No airplane can explode unless the pressure rises more quickly than it can dissipate; that's not happening with CO2 sublimation. I'd think that if he got into the air, he may have been OK. Or become a smoking hole.
....or not, personal choice. Don’t believe everything you hear on TV.
Racing sailboats, we used dry ice in taped shut Styrofoam coolers that would last for several days or more - if the stuff in the airplane was sublimating fast enough to raise the ambient CO2 levels enough to put the guy out it had to be pretty poorly packaged.dry ice needs to breathe, hence the loosely contained bags the dry ice was stored in. Completely sealed containers would build up a lot of pressure and cause issues.
"A sternum rub is the application of painful stimulas with the knuckles of closed fist to the center chest of a patient who is not alert and does not respond to verbal stimuli"
Perhaps that's because you're always alone?Neither have I...