In the Navy we had very large Halon system to combat fires in the main 
engineering spaces. If you worked in that space you actually wore a person 
sized breathing device that would last you long enough to get out of that space 
if Halon was activated. And you can bet we had a lot of training about it, the 
alarms, the time you had to get out after the alarm sounded before it was 
deployed etc.

 

In conjunction with the idea of losing documents, we should as a society get 
better at scanning these things. It is so much easier to have multiple diverse 
digital copies of these than the physical paper. Hell the banking industry got 
out of the paper check stuff 20 years ago. Have you looked at old documents 
scanned from original from places like Ancestry.com or Family.searc.org? They 
have links to a lot of governmental document sources, for instance I could see 
scans of the military muster reports for family members in the revolutionary 
war or from the state records of pension payments to civil war veterans. Mind 
boggling that we can now see scans of those original documents.

 

Thank you,

Brian Webster

www.wirelessmapping.com

 

From: AF [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Chuck McCown via AF
Sent: Wednesday, February 9, 2022 1:36 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: Chuck McCown
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT: Document Storage

 

I visited one of those once.  Before going in we had to have a training session 
about the alarms and the controls.  Not sure if we were supposed to do 
something other than leave if the alarm went off.  Maybe there was a delay to 
allow us to exit before releasing the gas.  It was a serious deal.  

 

From: Bill Prince 

Sent: Wednesday, February 9, 2022 11:11 AM

To: [email protected] 

Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT: Document Storage

 

In my former years, data centers often had halon systems which would displace 
air in the entire data center. They were phased out because no air is just as 
bad for humans as it is for fires.

 

bp
<part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>

On 2/9/2022 10:03 AM, Zach Underwood wrote:

Automate the whole racking system so that you can purge oxygen out of the whole 
room?

 

On Wed, Feb 9, 2022 at 12:42 PM Chuck McCown via AF <[email protected]> wrote:

Wow, I am sure there are lots of irreplaceable documents.  So if you were to 
build one, I wonder how to prevent this same problem?
I guess structural engineering needs to presume all the racks are full of 
water.

-----Original Message----- 
From: Nate Burke
Sent: Wednesday, February 9, 2022 10:36 AM
To: Animal Farm
Subject: [AFMUG] OT: Document Storage

Here in the Chicago suburbs, a 250k sqft document storage warehouse just
burned down.  It took them a week to put out the fire.  30' Racks
stacked with banker boxes, when the building sprinklers hit it, the
paper got waterlogged and got too heavy for the racks to support and
came down, taking roof supports and building sprinkler system down with
them.  Once the roof was opened up, the fire got lots of air, and just
started raging.  With the roof gone, nothing was holding up the precast
walls, etc.etc.  Basically there's no more building left.

So what kind of paper documents are stored in warehouses like this? Bank
Documents?  Law office contracts?  The Panama Papers?  I'm just curious
what the market is for industrial scale paper storage like this.  I see
a lot of storage places like this around the suburbs. Iron Mountain has
a couple big facilities.  I'm guessing you are responsible for your own
redundant copies at multiple storage warehouses?  Also seems like if
there are just boxes of papers stacked on a shelf, there's really no
security.

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-- 

Zach Underwood (RHCE,RHCSA,RHCT,UACA) 

My website <http://zachunderwood.me> 

advance-networking.com





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