I'd love to hear from someone with better knowledge of such matters than myself, but the videos I've seen on the internet sure LOOK (IMHE) like what I at least imagine a tactical air strike might look like.
As I recall, Ralph Nadar drove it off the market, with all his idiotic demands, whining, fear manger ing and outright bull****.
Wrong. Ralph Nader had nothing to do with the Beetle being withdrawn from America. The cause was, it was becoming increasingly impossible to get the car to meet Federal crash and emission standards. With sales starting to decline (they were down to only 30,000 units a year), VW wisely pulled the plug in the US market and also in Europe as well. Of course they continued to be built in other parts of the world with laxer standards for quite a long time, with the last country being Mexico when all production ended in 2003.
Thanks for the link... Altho I don't see anywhere in that link that parts were thrown 150 miles away....
Who do you think was one of the primary figures pushing better crash safety regulations? Not that they were bad, but Nader as at the forefront of driving those regulations.
Yep, but if industry policed their own, it wouldn't be a problem. We just have the wrong mandate as a society. Police have the exact same problem, they allow those who run roughshod and break the rules to continue.
Technically Grandcamp wasn't ANFO as the FO (fuel oil) wasn't there, had it been ANFO it would have likely been a bigger explosion than Hiroshima.Dunno anything other than that link is the first thing I found.
ANFO and fire don't mix. In KC, in 1988, at a construction site I used to drive past twice a day, an arsonist started fires at two semi-trailers in the middle of the night. FD showed up, but didn't realize thete were about 50,000 pounds of the stuff in those trailers.
http://www.firefighternation.com/ar...irefighters-killed-1988-kansas-city-explosion
I remember that one. I can't even imagine 2300 tons.
Industry DOES police its own. Nobody with money (read: Large Corporations) wants the liability of doing things the wrong way.
The thing I find funny (?) about the China explosion is the first thing the Chinese did was detain officials from the responsible party.
Wrong. Ralph Nader had nothing to do with the Beetle being withdrawn from America. The cause was, it was becoming increasingly impossible to get the car to meet Federal crash and emission standards. With sales starting to decline (they were down to only 30,000 units a year), VW wisely pulled the plug in the US market and also in Europe as well. Of course they continued to be built in other parts of the world with laxer standards for quite a long time, with the last country being Mexico when all production ended in 2003.
Really? How do you think the BP blowout happened? By trying to save 12 hrs on bringing the well into production and short cutting the cement job by orders of the BP company man and to the objections of the driller. The guys on the rig capitulated and did what they knew was wrong at BP's insistence. Seen stuff like that frequently when I worked offshore. Everybody afraid to lose money.
\One well blowout in the last XX years does not condemn "industry".
And you're right. Everyone IS afraid to lose money. Don't you think BP would have been much happier with a delay rather than the billions in reparations and penalties they are ultimately going to pay?
On the other hand, there is no doubt that individuals occasionally do things the overall corporation wouldn't approve of, but again, that isn't a condemnation of industry..
Technically Grandcamp wasn't ANFO as the FO (fuel oil) wasn't there, had it been ANFO it would have likely been a bigger explosion than Hiroshima.
The Minor Scale test exploded 4.8 kilotons on ANFO, more than twice the The material that blew up in the Texas City blast, and this was equivalent to 4 kilotons of TNT. Over twice the material, ANFO, and still far short of the Hiroshima explosion.
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BP is just shifting the income stream to pay for the penalties...
Funny how oil is at it cheapest in 7 years and by shear accident their huge gasoline refinery in Ill ( it supplies about all gas stations east of the Mississippi).. just broke down.... Now gas prices are going up .50 cents while crude is dropping like a rock....
It is a giant shell game and the consumers are getting it in the a$$..
So....
Explain to us the massive pollution the EPA caused last week in Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, Nevada and eventually California....
Ps... The EPA is NOT industry,,, They are the guvmint...
I do believe they were cleaning up a mess originally created by private industry....
1949 Texas city Texas, the largest man made non nuclear explosion ever. what it amounted to was a ship sized IED.
Bat Scat, Fuel oil, and a welder.
what you see now as Galveston harbor. parts of the boat were found as far away as 150 miles.
Our Neighbor when I was a kid was a merchant marine who was on his way to man one of those ships, I forget which one.I'm gonna call bull**** on the 150 miles. They might have FELT the shockwave 150 miles away, but no parts made it that far. One ship's anchor landed a mile away.
Interesting trivia. I took care of an old one legged man in the ICU one night a few years back. I asked him how he lost his leg... He said he was a longshoreman, who was working that dock that day, and was walking away from the ship at a distance when it blew. Shrapnel took his leg off. Killed the guy standing next to him.
The EPA was informed there was a circus, they did nothing, but could have prevented it. instead they opened the port hole that allowed the spill, and has done nothing to stop it.
So....
Explain to us the massive pollution the EPA caused last week in Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, Nevada and eventually California....
Ps... The EPA is NOT industry,,, They are the guvmint...
EPA is a monster that industry created. Accidents happen yes, but without EPA there would be much worse. It's a shame that everyone has forgotten what the U.S. was like in the 50s and 60s with black skies and burning rivers, cities with air people couldn't breath.
Really? How do you think the BP blowout happened? By trying to save 12 hrs on bringing the well into production and short cutting the cement job by orders of the BP company man and to the objections of the driller. The guys on the rig capitulated and did what they knew was wrong at BP's insistence. Seen stuff like that frequently when I worked offshore. Everybody afraid to lose money.
One well blowout in the last XX years does not condemn "industry".
And you're right. Everyone IS afraid to lose money. Don't you think BP would have been much happier with a delay rather than the billions in reparations and penalties they are ultimately going to pay?
On the other hand, there is no doubt that individuals occasionally do things the overall corporation wouldn't approve of, but again, that isn't a condemnation of industry..
I work for a very large corporation. There is no way something like that could be done and covered up successfully. When you got ratted out oil prices would be the least of your worries.
Needless to say, I'm not a conspiracy theory guy...
Enron pulled it off quite successfully...
Technically Grandcamp wasn't ANFO as the FO (fuel oil) wasn't there, had it been ANFO it would have likely been a bigger explosion than Hiroshima.
This is how 1-2 kilotons in a silo 100ft diameter silo extending 12ft into the ground look like:
What I always found interesting is how quickly the destructive effect from the explosion itself tapers off. In the foreground you have a 50ft deep crater but a couple 100 feet away the brick smokestacks are still intact.
Sodium cyanide, like other soluble cyanide salts, is among the most rapidly acting of all known poisons. NaCN is a potent inhibitor of respiration, acting on mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase and hence blocking electron transport. This results in decreased oxidative metabolism and oxygen utilization. Lactic acidosis then occurs as a consequence of anaerobic metabolism. An oral dosage as small as 200-300 mg can be fatal.
Yeah, I noticed that from the article.
2300 tons of ANFO would have been even bigger. I wonder if the ship's fuel oil had any accelerant property on the AN in the hold?
"Industry DOES police its own."
Sometimes... Sometimes not. Just ask Johns Manville.
They already have, the list is a litany of hazardous chemicals and a bunch of TNT.
Maybe a little bit bigger, but not that much bigger. Certainly no where near a Hiroshima size blast. As for the ship's fuel, probably it enhanced the effects some, but not as much as one might expect since they weren't mixed together.
Tianjin is pretty much a manufacturing city isn't it? Any commercial/industrial processes that use large quantities of sodium cyanide?
Enron pulled it off quite successfully...
\
BP is just shifting the income stream to pay for the penalties...
Funny how oil is at it cheapest in 7 years and by shear accident their huge gasoline refinery in Ill ( it supplies about all gas stations east of the Mississippi).. just broke down.... Now gas prices are going up .50 cents while crude is dropping like a rock....
It is a giant shell game and the consumers are getting it in the a$$..