Randall Clague wrote:
On Wed, 15 Jan 2003 18:08:55 -0800, Adrian Tymes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
Peroxide's dangerous, but not *that* dangerous if you handle it
properly. We have special facilities to store our peroxide, including
such measures as not storing it where it'll get hours of direct
sunlight and desert-grade heat every day. I don't think we've ever had
a spontaneous detonation when we weren't there. (Of course, we'd rather
have spontaneous detonations when we're not there than when we are, but
we'd really rather not have them at all.)
Adrian, what are you talking about?
ERPS has never had a detonation, of peroxide or anything else,
spontaneous or otherwise, in our presence or in our absence. No
detonations, period.
I was speaking to the question at hand: does peroxide necessarily
detonate when left alone for long periods of time? We provide proof
that such is not the case, assuming proper care (say, our standard of
care) is applied. Yes, our safety record is far better than just that
(as you said, we have never had a detonation, and as I said, we don't
want to), but that was the specific issue being discussed (spontaneous
detonations when no one is present).
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