we got a hold of some halon fire extinguishers in my helmet days and used
them to fill balloons to inhale.
some mental retardation later i realize that may have not been the best
choice. I did watch a buddy stepping off my porch legs just go their own
way. he thought he was falling into a void til the sidewalk broke his face.

But thats where banks, schools, chiropractors etc store their long term
storage documents. Document digitizers also store them sometimes. Probably
a lot of liability on the storage comapny

On Wed, Feb 9, 2022 at 12:12 PM Bill Prince <[email protected]> wrote:

> 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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>>
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>
>
> --
> Zach Underwood (RHCE,RHCSA,RHCT,UACA)
> My website <http://zachunderwood.me>
> advance-networking.com
>
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