At 06:30 PM 10/11/2004 +0000, Andrew Tubbiolo wrote:
Under the "L" listing, liquid O2 'explosives' is listed as a single entry. Also under "P" is listed 'Peroxide based explosive mixtures'. So does this mean that a liquid rocket engine using LO2 or H2O2 is considered an explosive?
No; the oxidizer based explosive mixtures they're talking about are oxidizer/carbon mixes commonly used in mining. Carbon black and LOX is a common mixture. Needless to say, do not try this at home; it's flippin' dangerous. ATF regulation of such mixtures is quite proper.
It looks like one out might be to transport gaseous O2 and liquify it on site with LN2.
Nothing wrong with having LOX. You should comply with the applicable OSHA regulations, which are easy to find and even easier to meet (if you avoid doing anything obviously stupid, you will find yourself OSHA-compliant) (Matter of fact, they're so easy to find, I did it for you. :-) http://www.osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/owadisp.show_document?p_table=STANDARDS&p_id=9750.) Transporting gaseous oxygen and transporting LOX both have risks, and regulations; which is more appropriate for you depends on your organization.
-R
Randall Clague Government Liaison XCOR Aerospace [EMAIL PROTECTED] 661-824-4714
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