At 09:28 PM 11/11/02, Robert Seeberger wrote:
http://www.nbc10.com/news/1771649/detail.htmlYou're at the gas pump and filling up your car. Without even knowing it, you may be making the one mistake that can be dangerous for you and anyone else in the car. Static electricity has caused fires at gas pumps across the country. Experts say that women are almost always the victims, according to NBC 10 reporter Beth McDonough. You may have noticed the new warning signs at gas stations warning about static fires. They are a very real danger. "My mother was in the car. I was afraid it was going to explode. I reached back through the fire, I grabbed the hose of the pump (and) I pulled it out of the car," said one victim. "When she touched the refueling nozzle, boom, the fire started," said another victim. Fires caused by static electricity at gas stations are on the rise. Experts say that about 150 fires have been reported across the country over the last two-and-a-half years and 78 percent of them involved women. Even children, like Alexis Canfora, have sparked the fires. Alexis hopped out of her mother's car to pump gas in Las Vegas and the fumes somehow ignited. Alexis burned her legs and midsection. Her mother worries that the scars from the static fire are more than skin deep. Her mother told NBC 10 that Alexis has gone through more pain than most adults go through in their entire life and it has changed her. Alexis has told her mother that she is worried that she is never going to get married or have kids. Now, "stop static" warnings are going up at gas stations across the country. It is the same principle as when you walk across a carpet and create a spark by touching something. The primary mistake that people make which causes the static fires is to slide back into the seat while waiting for the tank to fill. This can create static electricity, which may spark when someone touches the nozzle The fires are rare, but when they have occurred, it is usually during cool, dry, winter weather. Women are usually the victims because they're more likely to get back in their cars when it's cold.
I thought maybe the problem was the same one that plagued early PCs: some of them were getting zapped by static electricity, and it was disproportionately the computers on the (female) secretarys' desks which were being damaged. Turned out that the women were generating static electricity when they crossed their legs while wearing nylon pantyhose . . .
--Ronn! :)
I always knew that I would see the first man on the Moon.
I never dreamed that I would see the last.
--Dr. Jerry Pournelle
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