Black Hole
May contain traces of nut
Is CO heavier or lighter than air?
I believe it is heavier than air, that is why one needs to take serious precautions when cleaning tanks and other containers where you have to crawl inside, even when the top is open.Is CO heavier or lighter than air?
pksafety.com
There's a famous court case from the US where a woman took a microwave oven manufacturer to court. She'd microwaved her dog to dry it after bathing it, which didn't end well. Her case was the instructions did not say you shouldn't microwave your pet, and she won. Which is why for decades afterwards microwave instructions said not to microwave your pet.'Scuse me, but I don't need telling to keep away from nappy buckets (whatever that might be)! It's like the TV adverts telling me to keep away from children. Yes!
CO is about the same overall density as air so it spreads far and wide, which is one of the reasons it is so dangerous.By simple reasoning a molecule of CO is heavier than a molecule of O2. But by that same reasoning a molecule of water H2O is much lighter so why does water not float on air? Need a chemist to explain that to this layman.
Yes.Is CO heavier or lighter than air?
I think you may be thinking of CO₂ which is more dense (x1.53) than air.I believe it is heavier than air, that is why one needs to take serious precautions when cleaning tanks and other containers where you have to crawl inside, even when the top is open.
No that's for CO2 which is quite a lot heavier than air, you can simply descend into a tank full of it.I believe it is heavier than air, that is why one needs to take serious precautions when cleaning tanks and other containers where you have to crawl inside, even when the top is open.
People are obviously that stupid.There's a famous court case from the US where a woman took a microwave oven manufacturer to court. She'd microwaved her dog to dry it after bathing it,
Americans. Need anyone say more? Especially these days. That was before them. Sadly the influence is seemingly unstoppable from its ever increasing encroachment over here.People are obviously that stupid.
Do we need warnings for everything? What happened to common-sense?
That's the problem with the US legal system, you can sue for anything. We're in danger of going the same way, but we do have the concept of whether the ordinary man in the street would consider this reasonable or not in our legal system.People are obviously that stupid.
Do we need warnings for everything? What happened to common-sense?
I still don't need telling to keep away from nappy buckets, and I don't care whether stupid people don't.There's a famous court case from the US where a woman took a microwave oven manufacturer to court. She'd microwaved her dog to dry it after bathing it, which didn't end well. Her case was the instructions did not say you shouldn't microwave your pet, and she won. Which is why for decades afterwards microwave instructions said not to microwave your pet.
Yes.we do have the concept of whether the ordinary man in the street would consider this reasonable or not in our legal system.
I expected somebody would pick up on that, but "lighter than air" is a common idiom for "less dense than air".And I think you mean "relative density". Tut-tut, BH.
You can even try to sue a foreign broadcaster for something which has no bearing on the US as it wasn't shown there.That's the problem with the US legal system, you can sue for anything.
Not sure I'd trust that now with all the sheep following the tripe on social media.we do have the concept of whether the ordinary man in the street would consider this reasonable or not in our legal system.