Thanks for the comments everyone. They are all worth a read if anyone hasn’t seen them yet. So many close calls, it just goes to show the importance of awareness. A few notes that have come up so far… The spurling pipe was sealed with foam. Even without sealing it though, there wouldn’t be decent airflow. Yes, we only looked at 1 very specific case here. Many more situations could also result in a toxic atmosphere. I intentionally didn’t go through how to enter enclosed spaces. You should only be going in after receiving formal training anyway. This video just raises awareness that these spaces are lethal.
@user-mv4ln8dq6j5 жыл бұрын
Wow that was a very good explanation 👍👌
@fukpoeslaw36135 жыл бұрын
I can't believe it. The chain can get in and out but no air can?
@putrid.p4 жыл бұрын
A question worth answering is why would you perish so quickly when most people can hold their breath for at least one or two minutes? Also, why didn’t the men feel uncomfortable before perishing, like you do when you hold your breath? More physiological than engineering questions, I suppose!
@onewithoreos14 жыл бұрын
@@putrid.p The body doesn't detect lack of oxygen but a build up of carbon dioxide, if you enter a space with little or no oxygen you can still remove the CO2 from your blood but not replenish the oxygen and you will passout without realizing anything is wrong
@iforgie4 жыл бұрын
I still alive when I was nineteen and the Apprentice Deckhand with on the Radium Guilbert I stood fire watch with miracle worker inside a four hundred gallon diesel barge. As soon as the manhole covers came off the First Mate found out that a Mates Ticket is a limited Ticket it only good for ten days.
@doxielain22315 жыл бұрын
I never thought about oxidation depleting the atmosphere. It's one of those obvious things that I never connected together. Thank you.
@rogerwilco25 жыл бұрын
Yeah. I know Rust is Iron-Oxide. This video put two and two together.
@13gan5 жыл бұрын
I think its because we have always taken the availability of oxygen for granted. Its not like we're astronauts so as long as we have air, we just automatically assume that there will be oxygen.
@ameraldas36415 жыл бұрын
wouldn't it be vented because the anchor chain has to come out of the chain locker so there would be a vent for things to enter and exit. including air, and plants and animals. or are they airtight on modern ships?
@seraphina9855 жыл бұрын
@@ameraldas3641 There will be an opening for the chain though it's probably not going to be much larger than the chain itself and runs directly through the windlass and such that are used to raise the anchor hardly an optimal ventilation conduit.
@bigbadjohn105 жыл бұрын
Even without the oxidation, the person going in will deplete the oxygen. This is a real problem even in places not normally considered enclosed spaces. If there are heavy fumes produced by a process they can cause low oxygen if there has been a leak or the ventilation system has been switched off.
@Jay_LT45 жыл бұрын
I wanted to know ONE thing about boats, ONE THING, now KZbin algorithm thinks I should commit my life to ships
@wolfhunter985 жыл бұрын
Welcome aboard!
@SketchbookGuitar5 жыл бұрын
It was about why they painted red at the bottom wasn't it? ....
@crazyice29805 жыл бұрын
@@SketchbookGuitar yes it was about why they painted red at the bottom
@MiracleDiving5 жыл бұрын
SketchbookGuitar same here...Lol
@BuffCitizen5 жыл бұрын
Maidlife same here...
@mykthafsh715 жыл бұрын
The saddest part is the irony. This happened on an Emergency Response and Rescue Vehicle. That's like a fire happening in the fire hall.
@bufferbuffer73205 жыл бұрын
Fire stations are burning down every now and then...
@Seat_Ibiza_6L5 жыл бұрын
Fate does love irony
@MrChuck789295 жыл бұрын
Where else would the fire live? In a water hall? lmao
@kirbs00015 жыл бұрын
The ERV was even on-duty for an oil rig, which has MANY confined spaces that ERVs are expected to have rescue plans for. Everybody that works with confined spaces receives training on how to recognise when an atmosphere isn't safe, and how to respond in the case of a casualty. That three people died due to improper access to a confined space on that ERV demonstrates some SERIOUS training deficiencies and the company is probably liable for those personnel's deaths.
@nikkimcdonald45625 жыл бұрын
@Mikey The Fish.. irony I see what you did there
@angelsjoker81904 жыл бұрын
It also illustrates how your breathing reflex is not triggered by lack of oxygen (but by oversaturation of CO2 in your blood)
@joevideowatcher3 жыл бұрын
Wouldn't that be the result if you're not getting enough oxygen? I'm confused.
@emissarygw22643 жыл бұрын
@@joevideowatcher you can still expel co2 if there's no oxygen. And without oxygen you won't produce more co2.
@joevideowatcher3 жыл бұрын
@@emissarygw2264 Thank you.
@angelsjoker81903 жыл бұрын
@@joevideowatcher As EmmissaryGW2 said, you can breathe out CO2 and without breathing in O2 your body doesn't produce anymore CO2 so it "thinks" you're fine. This happens with the classic CO intoxication (often in suicide, or when material doesn't get properly burnt and there is no airflow). Your body thinks it's fine but your brain doesn't get O2 to work and you pass out and then die. CO intoxication is dangerous in two ways. First, the aforementioned inhibition of lack of oxygen signal that makes you pass out without even noticing it, and secondly, the CO molecules have a strong bonding force to your blood cells that are supposed to transport oxygen in your body and deliver where it's needed. Due to this strong bonding force, those blood cells aren't free anymore to take O2 molecules. So even if you're rescued and taken out of the danger zone, you still can die of lack of oxygen for a while because your body is unable to absorb enough oxygen from the air.
@gangisspawn13 жыл бұрын
Unless you have copd or are a chronic heavy smoker, then the oxygen drive overrides your co2 drive, because their body is used to high co2.
@Jasonasdoipjahrv3 жыл бұрын
Had a job on a barge a year ago, manager wanted the job done quick as he only calculated 1 day of work. Went inside, smelled diesel, stupidly enough trusted my coworker it was safe, got a headache, went out and demanded ventilation before going back in. My manager was pissed but I didn't care, few hours later we had a welding ventilator. Don't ever put work before ur own health, if not sure just don't do it!
@Getoverhere6663 жыл бұрын
Hello, what country your manager origin from?
@Getoverhere6663 жыл бұрын
@Doctor Zoidenberg boris yeltsin
@Jasonasdoipjahrv3 жыл бұрын
@@Getoverhere666 I don't see why its relevant but it was in The Netherlands.
@Getoverhere6663 жыл бұрын
@@Jasonasdoipjahrv I see! Thank you! So this is the same and international. I had many of managers of this kind in Russia.
@Jasonasdoipjahrv3 жыл бұрын
@@Getoverhere666 yup, in construction/installation work it seems profit still comes first. Big joke all those safety briefings.
@CoralPolyps5 жыл бұрын
If the _only_ entrance is bolted shut, then you should probably just... not.
@paddor5 жыл бұрын
Thank you. I totally missed that in the video.
@wanderingbufoon5 жыл бұрын
Sometimes people dont really think of these kinds of stuff. Empty but spacious space. No wierd smell. Shouldnt be toxic, right? Its just things that fly over your head. Like entering a locked storage room. You think its locked because its because they dont want people to be there because of the chain suddenly moving and dropping. Its not like they were warned (no oxygen inside). Its the immediate threat that we worry about and never the other stuff so its understandable as to why 2 people had gone there without breathing equipment.
@MusicBent5 жыл бұрын
The only other entrance was probably the chain entrance. Probably pretty narrow compared to the volume inside.
@WillyShakes5 жыл бұрын
Yeah, removing bolts and climbing down a ladder shaft just to secure an anchor chain for the night because it's annoying seems like a really bad idea.
@im1who84u5 жыл бұрын
That's what I am thinking.
@threethrushes5 жыл бұрын
This is the classic reason why one doesn't rush to save someone collapsed in a room without thinking a little bit first. Instead of one casualty, you could become the next one, and multiply the rescue complications.
@ranny35075 жыл бұрын
Gerhard Symons yup, thats what we learned in lifeguard training
@seraphina9855 жыл бұрын
Indeed well really this applies in a room or anywhere else for that matter first priority is always to ensure safety. Course the very fact there is a collapsed person should give one immediate pause, people don't collapse for no reason so ruling out any environmental hazards that could have already created one casualty and may remain capable of creating additional casualties should be the first thing on your mind. Obvious candidates of course include enclosed spaces, chemicals (Asphixiants/Poisons), faulty live electrical equipment etc.
@lafan98725 жыл бұрын
Gerhard Symons scene safety you aren’t helping the situation if you rush in and become another casualty
@afriendofafriend57665 жыл бұрын
TBH, this pretty much applies everywhere. There's a reason the victim got hurt and that reason may still be present.
@gattopazzo805 жыл бұрын
I guess in this case there´s a fallacy which is difficult to spot early on: you just see somebody collapsing, and don´t really know why. First thing you think is that it´s just the guy, not the environment itself, and proceed with his rescue... The danger of the environment itself is not yet clear and still difficult to assess (or at least just as difficult as before the first guy got in), until multiple bodies build up the full picture...
@AverageArtz5 жыл бұрын
So they died of hypoxia virtually at sea level? Damn, that's a hard one.
@danielpalmer37065 жыл бұрын
AverageArts more than likely H2S caused by the rust
@milandjuric80435 жыл бұрын
Carbon monoxide, it is very very toxic, less than 0.1% in the air can cause death if i remember correctly, I dont really know if thats the case there but it can be very dangerous espetialy in engine rooms or such
@danielpalmer37065 жыл бұрын
Milan Djuric carbon monoxide is an off glass from the combustion process. So you are correct about the engine room. But this case specifically more than likely H2S as there is no machinery in that specific compartment that uses combustion.
@milandjuric80435 жыл бұрын
@@danielpalmer3706 Makes sense, but hidrogen sulfide stinks alot it would be easier to notice, i didnt know that there is a concentracion of it that would kill you without you being able to detect the strong "rotting egs" smell
@danielpalmer37065 жыл бұрын
Milan Djuric after 150ppm you get what called olfactory disorder and unknowingly lose all sense of smell. But if you’re descending a ladder bay the airflow of you moving downwards will draw fresh air in with you till you at the point of no return and on the ground dead.
@DAMitAlI3 жыл бұрын
I worked security/emergency response in a chemical plant. The site had an hour going over enclosed spaces. Basically it broke down to ‘don’t’ and ‘really, don’t’.
@Heavywall703 жыл бұрын
I work in refineries, Confined spaces are LITERALLY the most deadly places and require extensive planning. Truth be told, if you are struck unconscious, you will likely die there. The atmospheres in them are constantly changing due to the chemical reaction of hydrocarbon breakdown, or welding processes or cutting processes that use up the o2. Add to that, sloped floors, distillation trays or baffling and you’ve got a seriously dangerous space to been in even if it had a breathable atmosphere. In this case they were entering a space with a shifting anchor chain, that reason alone was probably why the “man way” cover was bolted. It is not a space designed for humans to be in. Calling it a “hatch” implies it’s a door intended to be used.
@q_eredaane49063 жыл бұрын
there is also a small point to add to this, metal breathes because of autoxidation so uses up a lot of oxygen, combine that with saltwater bringing even more dissolved ions into the mix and you have a space with almost 0 Oxygen and full of gasses like CO, CO2 and even Cl2, NOx (common if plastic is present) and obviously Nitrogen, and all of that on its own is (depending on the concentration) deangerous to humans, the lack of oxygen just means you'll also go uncontious after 2-3 breaths
@konzetsu60683 жыл бұрын
Fighter pilots have to pass an Hypoxia* certification, thus having been trained to recognise their own symptoms for hypoxia (there’s a varied list of common symptoms, which are exhibited and in which combination is highly individual). This kind of self awareness training maybe should be applied at sea as well for enclosed spaces. Won’t help you if some other gas knocks you out, but recognising your own symptoms for lack of oxygen could save your life.
@eamonia3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I was thinking that the guy was going to be crushed at first but then realized that there were 2 more to go.
@jdan58073 жыл бұрын
Do many people die at refineries?
@Heavywall703 жыл бұрын
@@jdan5807 Honestly not that many, the number one cause of death in industry in general is falls from height. There are SO many safety aspects of refinery work and maintenance that in order for someone to actually die either it has to be a highly uncommon event like an explosion or a noxious gas leak (the workers themselves wear on the person a detector) or multiple safety protocols have to be missed or ignored in order to create the conditions that lead to a death. We have work permits of many kinds; Safe work, Hot work or spark producing work , critical lifting permits and most germane to this topic, confined space permits. To successfully obtain a confined space permit you need to have checked so many aspects from hazardous atmospheres, which include oxygen levels FIRST, lower explosive limits, does it contain the possibility of a changing atmosphere, which is continuously monitored throughout the entry by an attendant who never leaves the entry point and records any and all entries and exits on a log that is part of the permit. So you can see by the things I’ve just mentioned that none of that took place. They were either ignoring safety or blatantly working around them. One last thing, I know all of this because I am a refinery maintenance contractor’s employee, I’m NOT a safety professional, this is just an example of things you must know simply to get into the plants that need the contractors, literally the tip of the iceberg in terms of safe work practices.
@ehsanrt5 жыл бұрын
hi .. i just wanted to say thanks for this video ... my father was a navy diver who lost his life while entering a ship that was enclosed space 21 years ago i was 8 at that time .. he was working as commercial diver on a side job . all this year all i knew was the ship was on port and they had to go inside to close the holes and fill up some balloons to bring the ship up and relocated it .. my fathers friend was the first one who went in .. and he lost contuse , my father was second after him and there was also the 3rd friend after my father .. ( they didnt use scuba gear cause there was air inside and the hole wasnt big enough for scuba tank . ) my father and his friend who entered first time didnt make it to hospital but last person that entered survived .. for all this year i wasnt sure what cause the problem .. they told us there was toxic gas .. but now i understand exactly what happened .. thank for education me .. i feel much better now knowing this ..
@TheMegaspenny3 жыл бұрын
sorry for your loss, glad this helped you find a bit of closure.
@nunyabusiness8633 жыл бұрын
I'm real sorry for your loss. I too am glad you came across this.
@masteroogway15863 жыл бұрын
Im sorry for your loss he is in a better place now probably diving in heaven with his other friend having a good time and watching you
@altairjones51693 жыл бұрын
sorry for your loss
@niagarawarrior96235 жыл бұрын
i worked in a huge government building with various levels of security access, i always wondered what 'enclosed space access' meant, and why it was a big deal. great video
@DeathlordSlavik5 жыл бұрын
Those would probably be the service areas only used when something needs replaced or fixed usually in buildings though the areas wont suffer from huge buildups of gases unless there is a leak of some sort. Also since it was a government building its possible some of the doors may of been "fakes" where things were kept that were on a need to know basis as a variation of the hide in plain sight tactic as the spooks always love to find new and strange ways to hide things.
@TheLiamster5 жыл бұрын
NiagaraWarrior what building did you work in? And what was the security access for?
@physicsguybrian5 жыл бұрын
I am guessing "enclosed spaces" in a security context means something entirely different.
@a_Minion_of_Soros4 жыл бұрын
That's where they keep the reptillians when not needed for impersonating politicians...
@halbronk71332 жыл бұрын
One of the most important things that you learn in a first aid / CPR / etc. class is that before you go to help someone, you look at the environment and think about whether it's dangerous for you to approach. Doesn't always work for situations like this where the threat isn't obvious, but always worth considering.
@jfournerat12743 ай бұрын
Although gases and a lack of oxygen are invisible you could probably still recognize the potential dangers as long as you are trained on confined spaces and their hazards. If you know that confined spaces often have toxic gases or oxygen deficiency inside them then upon seeing someone unconscious inside the space you would be able to recognize that they were probably overcome by toxic gases or a lack of oxygen inside the space. As someone who has watched many confined space safety videos on KZbin the moment the first worker went unconscious I immediately realized that he was probably overcome either by toxic gases or a lack of oxygen and that was well before it was revealed what actually happened to that person later in the video.
@PearceYT3 жыл бұрын
What bothers me the most is this was a rescue ship. They should know all about these kind of dangers and how to preform rescue/retrieval for them.
@wrije3 жыл бұрын
They wouldn’t know _all about these kinds of dangers_ because their primary job is assisting in water-based rescue, not the inside of a ship. Maintenance crews are not part of the “rescue crew.” If we want to talk about “who should have known about these dangers,” it’s the maintenance crew that unbolted a closed entry, and then had multiple people enter. Not the rescue crew, who had to put their own lives in jeopardy because the fault of a couple of dumbasses.
@surfside753 жыл бұрын
Murphy's law.
@Moleskineman3 жыл бұрын
@@wrije so you say they're not supposed to know about this since they're maintenance crew, not rescue crew, but then call them dumbasses. So which is it? Are they dumbasses for not knowing, or, being maintenance crew, are they not supposed to know?
@chrism66563 жыл бұрын
@@wrije These vessels have small crews of 12-15 people. There is no maintenance crew and rescue crew, a rescue team would most likely be drawn from the same deck crew that carry out the maintenance. This happened 13 years ago with many more incidents occurring on other types of vessels since then, and it’s something that’s taken a lot more seriously nowadays but it does still happen. I think the most recent was on a fishing boat in Fraserburgh harbour. That was because of leaking freezer gas and one man died. We are not allowed to enter any tanks unless it’s an emergency. We used to provide a standby team for shore based workers entering the tanks but now they have to provide their own. Even though it’s something we’ll most likely never have to do we still run enclosed space rescue drills every trip.
@wrije3 жыл бұрын
@@Moleskineman You seem to have misread. The maintenance crew are dumbasses. They clearly aren’t doing their job right, as they open a bolted shut enclosure and entered. Now, they also had _more_ of the maintenance crew enter, after watching one of them drop. I never said the maintenance crew needed to know how to rescue, just to use their head and not break protocol by entering bolted areas, nor continuing to go forward after seeing an issue. With a little _common sense,_ a toddler could see that’s dangerous. It doesn’t take textbook training to know that. If you’re gonna reply to me, make sure it’s something that isn’t absolutely moronic.
@Limon-cq5zu3 жыл бұрын
No joke this is extremely useful, I was totally oblivious to this danger until I saw this video
@jwn53742 жыл бұрын
Me too. And I know an enclosed space regularly opened on my ship (numerous bolts). Watching this gave me a new perspective.
@thunderwazp76535 жыл бұрын
I’ve definitely enjoyed learning about how NOT to die on a ship.
@PostWarKids5 жыл бұрын
ThunderWazp yeah I found it macabre when he said “I hope you enjoyed this video” during the animation of the guy dying
@pickelsvx5 жыл бұрын
How to avoid dying on a ship; (Step 1): Don't be on the ship
@Tactical_Assault_Pelican5 жыл бұрын
That boosts my confidence one going to France from England by ferry without my parents for the first time for a group scout trip 2 days after I write this comment
@glennrishton56795 жыл бұрын
@@Tactical_Assault_Pelican Dont worry, you'll be fine....most likely.
@Tactical_Assault_Pelican5 жыл бұрын
@@glennrishton5679 dude ime going today and now you tell me
@Dumertone5 жыл бұрын
A friend of my father (they're both seamen) almost died in the same circumstances. It was on board of a cargo ship, transporting scrap metal in the Baltic Sea. There were some suspicious rattling and banging noises in the cargo bay (probably poorly secured cargo), and the captain sent in a group of 3 crewmen to inspect the cargo. They were going in a line when the first (leading) guy collapsed. Two remaining guys (including a friend of my father) tried to wake him up and passed out in the process. Long story short - the dude whos story I'm telling was last in that line formation they were walking in along the corridor, and he turned back to call for help, so he was the furthest from the hypothetical center of "bad" air when he lost consciousness. And he is the only one who survived - after a lengthy rehabilitation in the hospital he developed a phobia and could not work far away from shore anymore. Reason of disaster was the same: cargo (scrap metal) absorbed the oxygen from the air. Captain was sued for giving a malicious order and found guilty.
@BiosElement5 жыл бұрын
A malicious order of hey, go check that out? There has to be more to it than that.
@alexnutcasio9365 жыл бұрын
You're found guilty in a criminal court. You're found liable in a civil court. BIG difference. One costs $$, the other your freedom. Which was it??
@Dumertone5 жыл бұрын
@@alexnutcasio936 If I recall correctly (I was like a 10 y.o. kid back there, no way to find out for certain now since we moved to another country) it was a criminal charge. I don't know the details, but that ship didn't have the required equipment to work in enclosed cargo spaces with potentially dangerous cargo (like oxygen masks and whatnot) but the captain still went ahead and ordered these guys go investigate. The captain either was incompetent and didn't know about the potential danger, or simply forgot about the special risks of transporting metal scrap - this ship was not specialized for any cargo and they moved all kinds of stuff. Anyway, he clearly should not have given them the order he did, even if there were strange noises in the cargo bay. I'm not sure about the correct course of action (not a seaman myself) but he should probably have informed the coastal guards\other authorities about the situation and await instructions. Why that unspecialized ship without special equipment was allowed to transport this sort of cargo is another good question. It happened in the late 90s in a post-soviet country (Lithuania) so I can imagine that personnel safety was not streamlined to the point it is in 2019.
@fieldaj20115 жыл бұрын
Maritime law. I think Arrested Development covered that topic some
@tissuepaper99624 жыл бұрын
@@BiosElement a malicious order of "hey, go completely disregard the absolute most basic safety protocol that's taught to every schoolchild who takes a first aid course and all go in there at once. don't test the air or send the first guy in on a tether or anything like that, just mosey on in". That's what we like to call criminal negligence.
@antonbabych34815 жыл бұрын
Enclosed space must be ventilated sufficiently before entering!
@cardy4ever5 жыл бұрын
Hey Anton. Have you ever worked within similar situations? Thank you.
@sirBrouwer5 жыл бұрын
and even then use a air testing tool to know how the quality inside is. and as the guard outside Don't ever go inside. that's just a extra body in the worst case
@VenturiLife5 жыл бұрын
Or correct breathing equipment.
@sirBrouwer5 жыл бұрын
@@VenturiLife or better both if possible.
@IroAppe5 жыл бұрын
There was a rule that personal protection equipment (PPE) such as ear protection, eye protection, steel-toed boots etc. is always the very last option. Whereever possible you should remove the cause of hazard first and then augment with equipment to be safe.
@BayleyDathorne4 жыл бұрын
Damn I've worked on cruise ships for three years and thought the "danger: enclosed space" was warning people of possible claustrophobia (to be clear I'm in entertainment so that's well out of my realm of needed operational knowledge)
@seldoon_nemar3 жыл бұрын
those warnings are there for multiple reasons other than just this danger (rust removing o2). there are a lot of processes or things used in processes that can be really bad with no ventilation. say for instance a refrigeration line runs through the area. if it leaks, it would build up in that area and anyone doing the work needs to know "hey, this is one of those places we told you to worry about" before entering. The same goes for work done in that space, using a solvent would be a hazard, along with welding. doing them together would be...spicy...
@57thorns3 жыл бұрын
I saw a carbon dioxide warning label on a door in a burger joint. The had a tiny little "harry potter style" cupboard under an escalator where they store CO2 containers for the fizzy drinks, instead of list most place having the soda stand free standing with good ventilation.
@dannypeck962 жыл бұрын
@@57thorns worked in pubs, had CO2 alarm system set up in the cellar. policy was we had one person standing by the door watching the alarm and camera while the other person changed a barrel or whatever needed doing. while I always followed procedure, we had an incident with a CO2 can leaking and a member of staff opening the door while the alarm was on to find out "why the coke machine was producing flat coke." two warnings, flat drinks AND the CO2 alarm, and they ignored both. they were fine in the end after i dragged them out, but there was a LOT of bollocking, both for the member of staff from me for ignoring the warnings, and for me charging in without any SCBA (which we didn't have, we were a pub after all) from the fire department.
@MGSLurmey Жыл бұрын
Adopt this rule of thumb: Always assume that any sign that reads "danger", "warning", "caution" etc is warning of an immediate threat to human life or health in the area. Even a wet floor sign is doing exactly that, as slipping on the wet floor can cause all manner of head trauma and even result in death. If you do not fully know and understand the danger, do not proceed. Simple as that.
@sail4life Жыл бұрын
@@MGSLurmey Unknown unknowns are what gets you though. You can be as diligent as possible, but what you didn't know you didn't know will get you anyway.
@mikhaelyosia16634 жыл бұрын
I'm an occupational health physician, and this video literally explains a whole course on confine space for me! Kudos to you brother
@TurtleSauceGaming2 жыл бұрын
he sells these videos for training purposes too.
@SteinErikDahle5 жыл бұрын
This might the the most painful video I've seen in a while... We had a quite similar story here in Norway some time ago: three elderly brothers was emptying a silo on their farm. One of the brothers entered the silo and immediately collapsed. His brother saw what happened and rushed into the silo to help his brother. He too collapsed within seconds. The third brother wondered where his brothers was. He found them inside the silo, collapsed, and rushed in to help them. All three brothers died, asphyxiated by the gasses developing in the silo...
@techalyzer5 жыл бұрын
Same story with a basement and potato supply. Anyone who cooks their own potatoes and obviously have them laying around, knows that they can produce some pretty nasty stuff when they rot. The whole family died in minutes.
@techalyzer5 жыл бұрын
@noc noc Yes, but most of them are ventilated, one way or another and you need to regularly check vents to make sure they're not clogged. No need for electric fans and more complicated stuff, just 2 vents allowing for a natural air flow will do just fine. There is a ton of problems with enclosed spaces, including oxygen depletion by oxygen combining with elements around to make oxides (rust).
@skunkjobb4 жыл бұрын
The same thing happened to my neighbors when I was a kid. The farmer went into the silo (I think it was a silo for grass silage), passed out, his wife went after him and both died. The same thing happened at another farm on Gotland, Sweden a couple of years ago. In silos with silage ore grain, CO2 is the most common killer. It has twice the density of air and accumulates at the bottom.
@mvnorsel63544 жыл бұрын
In 1988 I worked on a dairy farm in Alta. They were careful when pumping the shit out of the barn. Good memories and great Norwegian food.
@Longerbow4 жыл бұрын
There is also a similar story like this from the Netherlands, from 2013 I think. On a farm they where cleaning a manure silo, they did vent it, but not enough apparantly: as the first guy that went inside quickly lost conscious. The person that went in to save him also lost conscious. Then 2 more went inside, but they to lost conscious... In a deperate rescue attemempt the farmer used his tractor as a battering ram to punch a hole in the side of the silo. But sadly in the end 3 men died, including the farmers' son. As a weird turn of events the guy that went in first survived, but he did spent several weeks in a hospital in critical condition.
@VenturiLife5 жыл бұрын
The proverbial canary in a coal mine.... use sensors these days and check first.
@Ernoskij5 жыл бұрын
Or don't go in unless it's absolutely necessary, annoying as the chain banging is, it's not necessary to go in there.
@godlover90965 жыл бұрын
@@Ernoskij and even if required you should get an enclosed space permit from your safety officer first.
@michaelmccarthy46155 жыл бұрын
the canary is to detect methane or other poisonous atmosphere. Not the lack of oxygen.
@ClipperDays5 жыл бұрын
@@michaelmccarthy4615 same principle.
@andrewphillips83415 жыл бұрын
I don't think it is the same. A canary probably would have been fine.
@yanipro39785 жыл бұрын
Thank you. You probably saved someone. And now I know to look out for that. Never thought about that
@no1bandfan4 жыл бұрын
In our factory, there are designated enclosed spaces that can only be entered with a work permit licensed by the state. This license is so stringent that nobody is qualified at the plant to do the work. We have experts come in and we arrange a state inspector who comes out and issue the work permit that only last 6 hours. If the work last longer than that the have to stop and go through the process of reissuing the permit again. We take safety very seriously. In Europe some contractors died in enclosed spaces. There were using the plant’s pressurized air for their air supply. That’s against our policy, they’re supposed to have their own independent system for everything. Well the plant lost power for a few min and that was all it took for the workers to pass out and later die from suffocation.
@SharukhSaifi3 жыл бұрын
Where
@XTriggerMasterX3 жыл бұрын
@@xPRODIGYxGAMER The comment you're responding to never mentions the factory being in Europe though? In fact it specifically says a plant in Europe had worse regulations.
@wrije3 жыл бұрын
@@XTriggerMasterX You don’t bring up a random plant in some different country of the world if you’re currently talking about your plant. Chances are he’s in Europe, where there was a devastating accident, which in turn had them to adjust their rules/regulations to prevent another. If he does indeed _not_ live in Europe, then he should take a class on relevance of writing, and use an example from a plant in his own country, where the regulations can give you a good idea of the similarities of a plant and how to avoid these situations. EDIT: Take a class as in, a short 5-minute Google course that will massively benefit them later on. I don’t expect anyone to go take an actual college course on this.
@jockmcscottish75693 жыл бұрын
@@wrije Mate the comment was written by someone who lives outside Europe. The US is my guess, as he talks about 'state inspector's' and 'permits licensed by the state'. In Europe, I'm not aware of any country broken down into states, and this is also a term used regularly by Yanks.
@micfail23 жыл бұрын
@Jock McScottish you fundamentally misunderstand what a state is in the United States. Germany is a state, France is a state, Massachusetts is a state, Florida is a state. In some countries like Germany or Canada they have provinces but the states in the United States are not analogous to provinces in other countries. Provinces are generally organizational structures and not much more than that, states are literally their own Nations. If it makes it easier for you think of the United States as being the equivalent of the EU and the individual states as being the equivalent of the member states of the European Union, although ironically individual states in the USA have far more autonomy then EU member states.
@alexscott87364 жыл бұрын
This is something huge in the aerospace industry as well. Fuel tank entry involves removal of similar access panels and the use of atmosphere detecting tools. Very interesting!
@isaacibbotson46325 жыл бұрын
I spent a full day doing osha training on confined spaces. Really boring, but extremely important
@Kualinar5 жыл бұрын
It becomes less boring when you realize that it can save your life and that of others around you.
@AlMai2223 жыл бұрын
Wow guys I found the class badass over here.
@TheDoctor12253 жыл бұрын
@@AlMai222 Wow guys I found the boring troll over here.
@scotthix29263 жыл бұрын
Industrial piping engineer here, yep every year i get a new video on co fined spaces.
@dynamicworlds12 жыл бұрын
Yeah, the most boring safety courses are frequently the most important. The dangers that don't trigger our fear instincts and take meticulous measures to avoid can get us in trouble really quick. The long classes on things you would likely not think to be scared of before the class often have a mountain of bodies behind them.
@tarassu5 жыл бұрын
Had similar experience few years ago. Went on a trip. I accidentally blew a hose in a deep well with a ladder by closing wrong valve before switching off water pump. I almost thought I should reattach it when owner said - "only if you want to die there". There is no air to breathe down there, 50 meter well.
@PikaPetey5 жыл бұрын
i had two friends and a father die this way. they entered the pump house for a manure pound for service.
@cumguzzler85374 жыл бұрын
Damn
@Handles-Suck-YouTube4 жыл бұрын
My condolences.
@spawnof2004 жыл бұрын
h2s gas?
@UserCommenter4 жыл бұрын
I’m sorry friend :(
@CaptainDCap4 жыл бұрын
@@spawnof200 That is the number one cause for suffocation in facilities such as that, so probably.
@BrandonAEnglish3 жыл бұрын
Tragic irony: couldn't sleep, now sleep forever. What a reason to die for.
@Tweej3 жыл бұрын
The things people will do for a quiet nights sleep 😶
@RidinDirtyRollinBurnouts4 жыл бұрын
This reminds me of a somewhat similar set of circumstances, captured on police dashcam a long time ago: An officer was responding to a crashed tanker leaking noxious gasses. He saw a man on the ground near the gasses and went in to help. Moments later he was unconscious and died like the other man. These situations can quickly turn worse if proper caution isn't exercised
@CoastalSphinx2 жыл бұрын
That incident was particularly sad because the police officer could see the fumes/fog caused by the leaking ammonia gas, but he thought it was smoke from a fire in the crashed vehicle. If he had realized it was a leak from the tank, he probably would have proceeded more cautiously instead of just running to the fallen person. By going more slowly he might have identified the danger while it was still possible to escape from the gas. And even worse, the person who reported the crash had also reported the ammonia leak. So for example the firefighters also on their way to the crash were told to prepare for toxic gas. However the police officer was not warned, the message to him only mentioned a vehicle collision. If he had been warned of a reported ammonia leak, he probably would have survived.
@bathtap912 жыл бұрын
@@CoastalSphinx Holy, that poor man was let down by dispatch
@lashlarue7924 Жыл бұрын
I know that video well. Anhydrous ammonia. Poor guy never had a chance.
@SorenCicchini5 жыл бұрын
Nice video. I think a follow up is in order (especially after reading some of the comments on here) to explain why people don't recognise the dangers of confined spaces, and why confined space accidents are often double fatalities. Many people do not realise that our gasping reflex is triggered not by lack of oxygen but by high carbon dioxide levels, so many low oxygen environments (those without elevated carbon dioxide levels) feel perfectly safe until muscles suddenly stop working (because the blood supply is no longer providing them with oxygen) and the person collapses. It is quite common for a workmate to see this happen and think that the person has fallen, so they rush to help them and meet the same fate. This is why atmospheric gas monitors measure atmospheric oxygen content as well as levels of common toxic and flammable compounds, and many confined space entry procedures require connection to manned emergency rescue equipment (e.g. harness, retrieval rope, tripod).
@sophia-helenemeesdetricht19575 жыл бұрын
In my experience, ships are extremely dangerous and will consistently find new and improbable ways to kill and maim. Sailing isn't dangerous per se, but neither ships nor the sea gladly suffer the unwary or unwise. The rule in the navy was that an enclosed space had to be ventilated well enough to have replaced the entire atmospheric volume of the space no less than twice before entry AND you had to wear breathing apparatus in the space AND you were required to operate in teams of three AND permission from the chief engineer was required before you could pop bolts on an enclosed space. On my first ship, we had a big problem with constituent elements degrading and then reacting to form hydrogen sulfide, which for those who haven't been on ships, will kill you hella fast in an enclosed space. We had a guy die once when he tried to replace a section of mixed AFFF (basically 'roided-up laundry soap used as a firefighting agent)/seawater pipe for the non-firemain installed firefighting system. Turns out the mixture had been sitting there for a while and the inside of the pipe had acted like a catalyst for the reaction, so it was full of H2S. He was dead in two minutes. We didn't even find him until he'd been dead for three or four minutes.
@13gan5 жыл бұрын
There's a reason why most sailors in the past and even now are superstitious. You just don't know where bad things can happen and when it did, its always waiting to become catastrophic.
@jacobkrone2725 жыл бұрын
Very informative, thank you
@mfree802865 жыл бұрын
H2S is absolutely insidious stuff. Imagine opening something and getting a blast of rotten egg smell but it quickly goes away... everything's ok, right? No, the H2S anesthetized your sense of smell and is continuing to kill you. Enough concentration and you'll drop dead on the spot.
@-ShootTheGlass-5 жыл бұрын
Damn!!
@WadcaWymiaru5 жыл бұрын
Not the water but your own ship is the most danger thing on the sea XD
@xrmighty3 жыл бұрын
This is why I love KZbin so much. This was said so eloquently and also visually perfect, I have ADHD and it was easy to understand. Thanks for the original content. I will carry on the baton and do my part. Cheers boys and girls
@thorbrandal18703 жыл бұрын
I had OSHA training for working in a confined space. After that course, no shortcuts. 4 gas meter, blower, contact nearest fire dept with confined space rescue capabilities, harness and tripod w/cable at the entrance. The outside man was told not to come in, winch me out. And the blower was helpful for freshening up the air. Don't do it with out training and a plan!!!
@samaguirre32835 жыл бұрын
This event actually happened in front of me on the U.S.S. Ranger in forward port side chain hoist, I was supposed to be the one going down to unravel a knot that had developed on the chain but a bad slip sprang my ankle and couldn’t climb down the ladder. So another guy went down I was recuperating in my bunk when I was told that three men had passed out in the chain locker, I asked if they had vented the room before descending? The answer was easy to know they hadn’t we ever nearly lost three sailors just because I and the others that usually run/work in the anchor room weren’t there that day, it was bad on my part luck but as you said the simple idea that it is so locked up so tight that water or air can’t get in or out should’ve told them to check with me or someone who knew what to do!
@VoidHalo5 жыл бұрын
I love this channel. It explains things that most of us landlubbers wouldn't have even thought about. And the quality has steadily been improving over time. Not that it was ever a bad channel, it's always been good. It's just better now. Thanks so much for taking the time and obviously quite a lot of effort to make these. The world needs more people like you who enjoy sharing their knowledge with others and do it well.
@norbertfleck8124 жыл бұрын
This also works perfectly in farm silos, and sewer pipes/tanks.
@mixflip5 жыл бұрын
They should have used a TMX to test the oxygen level as explosive gas or vapor levels. Also use of a rescue line would have been smart too.
@TWBIAP3 жыл бұрын
Hindsight is 20/20
@n3lis943 жыл бұрын
A rescue line? How would that help? An unconscious person can't do anything with it so you'd have to go down to attach it and... oh wait, you're also dead now. -edit: I'll have to correct myself here, he probably meant a rescue line that is permanently attached to a harness before the dude went in. That actually would've helped them a lot, my bad.
@mixflip3 жыл бұрын
@@n3lis94 not all confined spaces are the same. Some could be benefit from a line if its close to the access point. A line could also tell responders which direction to look if there are T intersections.
@n3lis943 жыл бұрын
@@mixflipYou were talking about the situation in this video specifically, in which a line is completely useless until you are wearing oxygen gear. At which point the crew most likely did actually use a line to retrieve the three bodies.
@youtubeis...3 жыл бұрын
@@n3lis94 you wear a harness with a line attached to you and a tripod where they can pull your unconscious body up. And you have to wear an air monitor which would have gone off alert as you started down
@michaelbartow15465 жыл бұрын
Being a first responder and having taken a class that talked about confined space awareness this is what the instructor talked about. He said for every victim that is involved 2 rescuers become a victim also. In this case the first guy goes down. Partner who is looking to rescue the first guy becomes the second and the last guy who goes down to rescue the 2 others become the 3rd victim.
@johnwillis76743 жыл бұрын
Makes sense, my grandad always told me never go into enclosed spaces and now I know why
@sirBrouwer5 жыл бұрын
if you are the safety guard outside of the entree of the enclosed space Never enter it under any condition. stand on your post and alarm others to go in. you stay at your post and don't leave until all people inside are out again or if a higher safety person orders you to do so and he/she is taking over. even if it is your best friend or your own child. don't go in you are useless when you are died your self.
@glennrishton56795 жыл бұрын
The safety guard was batting .500, he got the first part right by using the radio to notify the bridge, then he made his fatal error of entering the space. I have to wonder if opening and entering the space was a spur of the moment decision while they were in the bosun locker for something else. If it were planned then take the damn O2 meter.
@mfaizsyahmi5 жыл бұрын
When your buddy system "buddy" has no more brains than yourself
@sirBrouwer5 жыл бұрын
@@glennrishton5679 even if it was in the spur of the moment. The amount of bolts they had to remove already should give them time to think. Even with a power drill it will take you some time to undo all of them.
@ukaszw66235 жыл бұрын
@@sirBrouwer this is just an example is someone really that stupid? I guess not nowadays when we speak about that almost every safe meeting
@sirBrouwer5 жыл бұрын
@@ukaszw6623 it happens way to much that it still is something that needs to be drilled in. At a plant i have worked people have died do to stupidity. Even worse that a college later on wanted to make the same mistake at a other silo when i was the safety guard. I was still making my report to know if the silo was safe but the idiot went in to it before i gave permission. I immediately called the fire department and had the guy being pulled out. and he was fired the same day. if even the example of death it self is not enough I don't know what will.
@Nusszucker5 жыл бұрын
My uncle had a somewhat similar experience. He is working as a facility manager on dry land in a well ventilated building. For the most part that is. One day he had to acompany a worker from another company who did a routine inspection of the fire supression equipment. They came across a not well ventilated room with a gaspipe and through some dumb luck the inspection worker managed to vent the gas pipe into the room. The Inspector collapsed and my uncle who was standing in the entry way nearly did too as they were in the only part of the building that was not ventialted. He managed to get stay concious near the floor, get out and call for help though, and nobody died. But he described the experience as the scariest thing ever. Knowing this and watching this video, I hope I never come across a situation like this myself.
@hihu72005 жыл бұрын
Mines are like that too. If you get deep enough or in a section with bad air, it can be fatal.
@mnxs3 ай бұрын
@@hihu7200And that's the reason for miners' historical use of canaries; they're much more sensitive to a problematic atmosphere than humans, and so if the poor little birdie drops dead, you GTFO.
@fredscribner8075 жыл бұрын
Learned this in the navy, one of the bolts also had a small hole drilled into it on covers over the bilges so that when partially unscrewed you could feel air escaping which indicated there was flooding in that particular space before the cover was unsealed.
@ValCronin2 жыл бұрын
That is an awesome tidbit of knowledge thanks
@2toothsome3 жыл бұрын
ignoring the warning via bolts, there should have been at least a simple sign on the cover that just says "you will suffocate" and that would be enough, but ideally the crew should also just be taught/know that in the first place without a sign
@Necrobin3 жыл бұрын
Instead of 18 thick bolts of whatever three words should have done the trick
@CadelBL3 жыл бұрын
@@Necrobin Any indication why it's dangerous to enter and therfore closed. They probably knew that they shouldn't go in there but did not know what to look out for.
@Necrobin3 жыл бұрын
@@CadelBL Six words then: Do not enter! You will suffocate!
@CadelBL3 жыл бұрын
@@Necrobin Guess I missunderstood your point in the prevoius comment, totally agree with you
@nikolaytupchik1143 жыл бұрын
The thing is, the gas in an incosed space wont kill you most of the time so saying going down will kill you isnt logical
@charlessmith64123 жыл бұрын
Before retiring, I worked on US Navy ships, and we were warned never to enter confined spaces that hadn't been checked by a certified person. We always believed that warning, but now I have some idea what they were talking about. It's too bad I didn't know at the time that I was working.
@sinaghatea5 жыл бұрын
Same thing happened to a worker in my apartment when i was 6. He was in the room where all toilets of the apartment have air ventilation. Basically where the toilet fans are connected, where smelly air leaves the toilet and enters that room. He was strapped up and was going up to do some cleaning, and he just died. I did not know the reason until i watched this. Thanks for educating us
@RedekerEleven5 жыл бұрын
I worked as a safety technician for a major shipyard. This was the #1 routine of the job, inspecting spaces on various commercial and navy ships so workers could work safely. O2 levels are the #1 concern, but chain lockers are ESPECIALLY dangerous because they also accumulate hydrogen sulfide gas (aka "sewer gas") because of the decaying plant-life that is often found growing on chains while they are in the sea. O2 depletion will knock you out but you can be saved if responders come quickly enough, but H2S will just kill you instantly.
@jothain5 жыл бұрын
I was thinking about something like this to be the deadliest thing in that space. Even basic anchors can have quite of an biofilm accumulation. Can't even think how much there is that in big vessels.
@WadcaWymiaru5 жыл бұрын
Anchor chain room should have holes for ventilation and seawater removal purpose during the bad weather.
@bleachesbrother66974 жыл бұрын
RedekerEleven why is H2S so deadly
@alexeyvlasenko66224 жыл бұрын
@@bleachesbrother6697 H2S binds to the cytochrome enzyme in mitochondria, preventing cell respiration. In other words, even if there is oxygen available, your cells can't use it if they're full of H2S, because the parts they would normally use to utilize oxygen are bound to H2S instead. So, even removing a person from the toxic air doesn't help them, as there is no way to remove H2S from the cells.
@UDumFck4 жыл бұрын
Being in the chemical industry, I've gotten lots of confined space training. It's the most common reason for fatalities, not explosions or poisonous gasses. My "ah-ha" moment was physiological understanding why people don't notice the lack of oxygen. Our bodies trigger the need to breath due to build-up of CO2 in our blood, NOT the reduction of O2. In low O2 atmospheres, you still expel CO2. So you never realize your O2 is plummeting until you lose unconsciousness. This is why it is so scary ... you have no warning that you are in danger.
@thestudentofficial54835 жыл бұрын
Radiation and stale air is one of the most dangerous hazard because of the false sense of security. You don't feel it until it's too late.
@henrymonroe43003 жыл бұрын
"Sorry boss, that looks like an enclosed space"
@A6Legit3 жыл бұрын
You go down first eh? Lol
@eamonia3 жыл бұрын
8 words that'll save your life.
@allengordon34543 жыл бұрын
Sounds like something I’d see on “Refined” lmfao
@TheAdriyaman3 жыл бұрын
@@eamonia Or get you fired if youre wrong
@Emily-ww9do3 жыл бұрын
@@TheAdriyaman better fired than dead
@c.j.cleveland74754 жыл бұрын
As an engineer in the Navy that was one of the most important safety procedures they taught us. Never go into an enclosed space, usually an oil tank, alone or without a safety harness. And the guy tending the line on the harness couldn't just jump in to help you if you collapsed. He had to call for help first, even if it looked like the guy inside was going to die from asphyxiation. That way you didn't wind up with 2 dead snipes
@fourtoes4125 жыл бұрын
Something similar occurred right next door to me. 3 workers died when cleaning a 12m deep water well. One collapsed while in the bottom of the well, and the 2 guys who went into help the first guy, and also suffocated. One labourer left a wife and three young children - very, very sad.
@woodalexander5 жыл бұрын
It's not just lack of Oxygen, but also presence of inert gasses used for welding, CO or other exhaust gasses from equipment, and other contaminants that can make confined spaces very dangerous, both during construction and afterwards. The Navy and shipyards treat this problem very seriously, and have extensive confined space certification programs to test air and post whether they are safe to enter or not. Confined spaces that are not safe to enter cannot be entered by any part of your body.
@ChevisPreston5 жыл бұрын
Argon is spooky man
@jothain5 жыл бұрын
Well that's not a specific "navy" thing. It's on pretty much all industries
@LuigiSimoncini5 жыл бұрын
I heard of accidents like this on land e.g. people cleaning big tanks. Good to know some possible reasons. Not only you make great videos, today you may have saved some lifes in the future! Thanks!
@CLipka23733 жыл бұрын
The most dangerous thing about such situations is that you won't even notice that you're suffocating. The human body is not designed(*) to sense a lack of oxygen. It is only designed to sense an excess of carbon dioxide. (*metaphorically speaking)
@DrTWG3 жыл бұрын
There are numerous physiological responses to hypoxia and hypercapnia . There is no actual 'conscious' perception of blood gas levels per se - you may be able to recognise certain clinical signs associated with hypoxia or hypercapnia . Hypocapnia (in e.g hyperventilation) can also cause signs - the low CO2 causes a rise in pH which in turn can lead to a decrease in ionised calcium - hypocalcaemia - signs include Trousseau's and Chvostek's sign , acute dysarthria (inability to articulate speech due to laryngeal muscle spasms) . (I'm an MD)
@CLipka23733 жыл бұрын
@@DrTWG The point is, your body doesn't recognize hypoxia in any way that would motivate you to leave the danger zone. Not unless you've had special training to consciously recognize _your_ specific symptoms of hypoxia.
@DrTWG3 жыл бұрын
@@CLipka2373 Just goes to show how important it is to be clear about what your talking about .
@teddytysoe33103 жыл бұрын
@@DrTWG or just goes to show you don’t need to be a know it all on KZbin comment sections
@DrTWG3 жыл бұрын
@@teddytysoe3310 Yes and posting vacuous drivel is OK as well.
@EmperorDank Жыл бұрын
Every time i've refreshed my training qualifying me for tank entry this incident is used as an example. Great video explaining it
@TheGamingTechs5 жыл бұрын
If you get enough subscribers to make this a commitment as opposed to a hobby, would you upload weekly? I always look forward to your videos!
@CasualNavigation5 жыл бұрын
If I got to the stage where my video skills could generate an income, then I would do 1 or 2 per week. Until then, it is just a fun hobby for me.
@jmonsted5 жыл бұрын
@@CasualNavigation And a hobby that the rest of us enjoy too. Thanks!
@strikeforcek91495 жыл бұрын
@@CasualNavigation what do you use to make your videos, how did you get into this hobby? I've always wanted to learn to do this to animate my dogs. :)
@CasualNavigation5 жыл бұрын
I use the adobe suite for all these. Then tutorials on KZbin are the best way I have found to teach myself.
@strikeforcek91495 жыл бұрын
@@CasualNavigation wow man, you have some SERIOUS time invested in each video! Makes us appreciate the content just that much more. Thanks very much for the reply.
@mrpddnos5 жыл бұрын
This is why you don’t rush in when you see someone collapse in a room, without apparent reason. Especially when the room has been closed for quite some time. The reason might not be apparent but the reason is absolutely there. The first rule you’re taught during any rescue class is “safety first, first your own safety, then the safety of the victims”
@donb80883 жыл бұрын
I always remember my Emergency Medical training instructor saying that if two people are unconscious and you don't have a full protective suit, go back the way you came because you cannot even try to help. Also the chances that two people become unconcious with no immediately clear cause is so low that it's always worth to save yourself.
@groudon41055 жыл бұрын
These are very well done the animation is very good and the videos are informative
@CasualNavigation5 жыл бұрын
Thanks Mcbeefatron
@rogerwilco25 жыл бұрын
Yes. Very well done.
@Zane_Endicott_6 ай бұрын
I used this video to help me give a safety brief for my OSHA class. Your contribution was incredibly valuable.
@CasualNavigation6 ай бұрын
Thanks Zane! I'm glad the video was useful.
@libenasukro3 жыл бұрын
Not everyday that I see life-saving information on KZbin. This is something I did not know and I would have made a similar mistake. Thanks!
@gerardtrigo3805 жыл бұрын
When I was working on Drill ship's offshore we regularly got training and warning about closed spaces. I am surprised that people aboard a vessel, especially one involved with rescue work, would have crews unaware of such things and be so lacking in knowledge about enclosed spaces.
5 жыл бұрын
Similar thing can also happen in caves. I've heard of a "dog killer" (not an official name) cave where if you came with your dog it would suffocate but you were fine. The reason is some gasses that are heavier than air are near the floor of the cave so your dog can't breathe but you are fine (as long as you don't try to lie down).
@jacktraveller82905 жыл бұрын
I love the animation of the spinning bolts.
@mapleleafsfan273 жыл бұрын
When I used to fix industrial garbage compactors, some of the big ones had the potential for low oxygen levels. We wore a vest attached to what looked like a giant fishing rod in case we passed out
@cpotisch5 жыл бұрын
This happening on a rescue ship reminds me of when (and this is a true story, I swear) my school had a fire drill, and a teacher forgot some bread in the staff lounge toaster, and it actually caught fire. Ah, the irony.
@jpaugh642 жыл бұрын
So, a fire caused by a drill? Oh my! 😬😂
@MervynPartin5 жыл бұрын
The scenario that you just described happened on one of the vessels of my seafaring days. I was on leave at the time, but I knew the deceased Captain and Mate. During an inspection of a Double bottom under an inerted LPG cargo hold, one person collapsed and another went in to rescue him and also collapsed. A crack in the steelwork had allowed inert gas to enter the double bottom, but failure to test and ventilate the atmosphere meant that this tragedy was then inevitable. A very heartbreaking affair. Unfortunately, in my later career, there were still those who thought safety rules did not apply to them
@IroAppe5 жыл бұрын
Yes, a good safety concept relies on multiple layers. Personal Protection Equipment always is the last option to augment. Try your hardest to remove the cause of the hazard first.
@glennchartrand54115 жыл бұрын
Had to inspect a two voids (enclosed space on an aircraft carrier) I left my OBD on while unbolting the second hatch and it saved my life I hadnt even finished removing the hatch , but I realized something was wrong because it was rattling ,the explosive gas monitor started screaming and the safety observer got word people 2 decks above us were getting sick/dizzy all within 30 seconds. I was already tightenting the nuts back on the access. If the passageway hadnt been well ventilated it would have been lethal for those people. If we hadnt been wearing our OBD's while loosening the bolts we would have died as well. It took a couple of days to figure out what went wrong. What had happened was a contractor painted the space and bolted the access shut before it dried. The space had filled with fumes , the fumes had over a year to decay and react with ALL the oxygen in the space so there was a lot of light hydrocarbons in the top of the space and other heavier gasses in the bottom and zero oxygen. The access cover was in the top of the void. When I loosened the bolts the gasses rushed out and air tried to fall into it( causing the cover to rattle) and so much gas came out at once that it overwhelmed the negative ventilation we set up. Fortunately the ships normal ventilation system was able to clear the air in the passageway before anyone was overcome ,or anything ignited it, and we rigged up a way to seal the passageway from us instead of just using negative ventilation before we VERY SLOWLY reloosened the nuts. P.S. Chain lockers are notorious for low oxygen content because the chain scrapes off iron filings into the locker everytime it is raised or lowered so eventually you get enough filings (with very high surface area) to consume all the oxygen.
@davejacobsen30145 жыл бұрын
When working on Shuttle Orbiter we had the same thing happen in an enclosed space. Two men went into a space open at top, used to hold rocket fuel. Fumes had pooled at bottom and they both died.
@doxielain22315 жыл бұрын
Is this different than the fatalities from prepping STS-1. That was entering the engine compartment after a nitrogen purge.
@olegvlk37105 жыл бұрын
Great video! I work as a surveyor, measuring metal thickness on vessels. I don't enter any tank without it have been ventilated and with gas analiser with me. Safety first, boys and girls.
@aldrnarienby47565 жыл бұрын
This video has made me quite aware of the dangers of any space without good ventilation. Thank you. Information can save lives.
@YourOldUncleNoongah5 жыл бұрын
Yep, back when i got my FIRST job i didnt know the dangers of enclosed spaces, and my boss at the time was a man who didnt know that safety was a word, let alone its meaning. At the time i was installing pipe work between buried concrete tanks on various mine sites all over australia. So that meant i was down inside these big tanks, accessed via a VERY SMALL manhole up top and a spindly little ladder and working with drills, PVC pipe primer and glue, getting HIGH AF and im amazed i wasnt killed. I did eventually get taught about these dangers, some years later, but initially, i was an empty headed kid from a small village that came to the big city for work and found it in the form of a careless old man and his truck. He would make me work in the rain with electrical tools, as soon as it was evening (any time after 5pm) he would drink alcohol and then drive and only when HE got tired would we stop for the night and sleep in the work truck ON THE SIDE OF THE ROAD because he would NOT pay for a motel or room at the pub for ONE NIGHT!
@Jszar2 ай бұрын
Damn, glad you lived.
@YourOldUncleNoongah2 ай бұрын
@@Jszar I learned a lot of ways how NOT to do things! I still see the old guy every now and again. Hes still kickin', in his 90s now I believe.
@palomino735 жыл бұрын
Very interesting video - brings back some information that had long before taught at school, e.g. that the rusting of metals is in fact a burning, that (although fireless) therefore uses up Oxygen ! I would probably have been one of those dead crew members, because I wouldn't have been able to make this cognitive connection and remember the physics classes of my school days ! So thanks even more for posting this !
@sendit77775 жыл бұрын
In the US, we call it a confined space. " Not designed for human occupancy" a place you won't stay nor perform normal routine work.
@pocarisweet83365 жыл бұрын
This might be common knowledge to people whose work is related to this stuff but to me its something im thankful for of learning, if there will ever be a time i'm face with the same scenario. Thanks man, wish you the best.
@57thorns3 жыл бұрын
Those bolts remind me of a summer working at an electric substation. Most of the stuff inside the gates (all gates are locked by padlocks) are safe if you are on ground level. The wires are high above, the transformers have their contacts on the top several meters up etc. But there are enclosures within the yard that are locked with bolts. Those are the capacitors, which hold line voltage at (physical) ground level.
@chuckboyle84565 жыл бұрын
Totally preventable tragedy. Massive failure of vessel senior leadership, (Master, Chief Engineer & Chief Bosu’n), to train/drill the crew in emergency response discipline. No new technical ground here, the lessons have already been learned across in many similar mishaps across the Fleet.
@Asigmatizam5 жыл бұрын
It's common knowledge that enclosed spaces should be ventilated before getting into them, no need to put the blame on higher-ups for that.
@williamnash47995 жыл бұрын
@@Asigmatizam When three people die in preventable ways, someone needs to be held accountable. Workers take their lead from management and managers job descriptions include enforcing safety procedures. There should have been signage and regular training sessions specifically about this kind of hazard. One death is an accident, two or more is negligence.
@TheFrontyer5 жыл бұрын
@@Asigmatizam Well, youre not allowed to work in enclosed spaces without a permit. And the permit has do be signed by an officer. This seems like soemthing they rushed as they wanted to sleep better.
@Kav.4 жыл бұрын
@@Asigmatizam it's not common knowledge, you're supposed to have training before entering any enclosed.space. the man above policy was good but the lack of training here was BAD.
@peteconz18075 жыл бұрын
I learned about that in the Navy, but I enjoyed the refresher course,thanks
@sparkey67465 жыл бұрын
I got out of the Navy too many decades ago to admit to, and the dangers of ship voids "restricted spaces" was constantly hammered into us. So isn't this training standard for all mariners? Except for the occasional Cruise, I've been a land lubber since I got out; however, my employer uses a variety of environmental chambers that are treated as enclosed spaces. We undergo training every year. So in this day and age, it surprises me that these accidents still happen. We human's are a stubborn species. Thank you for your very informative and interesting videos.
@CLipka23733 жыл бұрын
"I'm not gonna go into exactly how you should enter those spaces" - Good call. But just in case there's someone out there hoping to learn the procedure from the internerds, here it is, including an easy memorization tool: D-O-N-T As in: DON'T. Because if you have to ask the internerds, you absolutely positively have no business going in there. And don't even think "but what if someone's in there and I'm the only person around to rescue them". You keep out _especially_ if there's already someone in there unconscious. If you screw this up, you're _literally_ *dead* *before* *you* *even* *know* *it* . And become additional *bait* *in* *a* *death* *trap* .
@leechowning27122 жыл бұрын
Confined space is very rarely kill one. Because always somebody's going to try to go in and help, and unless you've got a professional stopping you right there you're going to be dead too.
@bucknut4lyf5 жыл бұрын
If you've ever worked in a factory, you get this type of scenario told to you in training. The plant I'm at has tons of enclosed spaces with the only entrance bolted shut. Just sticking your head in without breathing equipment can make you lightheaded.
@squidgysailor5 жыл бұрын
I love your videos sir. They are awesome. Straight to the point, interesting and so informative. I'm working on boats now and was not aware how dangerous it was. Thank you
@CasualNavigation5 жыл бұрын
Thanks squidgysailor. It's wonderful to hear the video is raising everyone's awareness already.
@EliteNoob225 жыл бұрын
i mean,if u see 18 bolts its a clear sign you're NOT supposed to be there
@ryanwilliams20115 жыл бұрын
If you weren't supposed to go in there wouldn't be a hatch at all
@cr4zyj4ck4 жыл бұрын
@@ryanwilliams2011 All compartments on a ship need to be accessible by some means, in case something inside them breaks. The bolted shut hatch should have had an enclosed space warning on it, and likely the chain lockers on large vessels now have such placards.
@Kav.4 жыл бұрын
Yes and no, I work on ships. You're supposed to have confined spaces training. All spaces with mechanical shit are supposed to be accessible. On the ships I work on enclosed spaces are very clearly marked. The failure here was the second man going in on his own, he should have waited for help and breathing equipment otherwise what is the point of having a man above?
@vj.joseph4 жыл бұрын
Thats a clear sign that regular person shouldn't be there because they don't usually carry the things pros do. The message is clear. Understand and act according to the situation. Stay out where you don't have to go in. Don't act like you know everything.
@lutzderlurch78774 жыл бұрын
@@cr4zyj4ck Well... back in the olden days, the room for the anchor cable was well ventilated, and the cable laid on gratings, allowing water to drain into the bilge, and the cable to dry, rather than rot
@kevinf.59575 жыл бұрын
The Viking Islay vessel, I remembered doing this as a case study in my Maritime Bachelor's.
@cypher33233 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@lothean20994 жыл бұрын
This was very educational. I heard about a similar situation with Wells or deeper holes about people dying in them. Scary.
@atllep985 жыл бұрын
Love the videos mate, makes me learn about things I didn't know I wondered about xD
@PhatPhil3045 жыл бұрын
There are stories of this happening to people in ditches out in the open, it doesnt just have to be enclosed spaces. There are ditches that actually might lack oxygen or crawl spaces under buildings and such with below oxygen levels.
@jpaugh642 жыл бұрын
Yep! Carbon Dioxide is heavier than oxygen, and it's not the only gas which is.
@deprofundis3293 Жыл бұрын
But how exactly would that happen? What would change the composition of air sufficiently to cause that, unless it was, like, septic seepage or something like that?
@_JayRamsey_5 жыл бұрын
Always have your air monitor set up!
@scatcat19944 жыл бұрын
Great video, I spent 4 Months on ERRV vessels in the North Sea and this exact case was used when we were learning about enclosed spaces. We were taught about enclosed spaces, how to wear and use BA (breathing Apparatus) and how to use O2 monitoring sensors. It's horrible what happened to these guys but hopefully more people will survive in the long run as a result.
@Chris-the-Saxon4 жыл бұрын
I did my sea survival refresher course last week down at Warsash and they had a video of this incident in one of the safety slides! This video was much better! Good video!
@BirivaMartirizado3 жыл бұрын
Recently there was a similar incident back in my town, a dog food factory worker was cleaning a huge drum where bones and blood were kept, he went down the ladder and died in a moment
@AliSot20002 жыл бұрын
This can also be a problem on shore. My biology teacher told a story about a farmer that went into his vine cellar and died because not only was there a lack of oxygen but the atmosphere had a lot of CO2.
@JohnDoe-bf1fw3 жыл бұрын
Not only did 3 people die, the surviving crew members still had to listen to those dam clanging chains all night.
@jordanfleming70223 жыл бұрын
Only now the clanging chains served as a sad reminder and dire warning.
@eamonia3 жыл бұрын
Bwahaha!!! Sure, I know it's horrible that 3 people died and all but that's some funny shit dude. Brilliant.
@krozareq3 жыл бұрын
The chain must be fed. It's a bad horror movie plot come to life.
@karunakararaja26633 жыл бұрын
This is the same way where my friend died, he went in a enclosed space in a boat , followed by a second member , after going in there was no response from them , then the third person went in ,he managed to get both out of the confined space , but first 2 person died at spot and third person was in ICU for a long time ..
@Sebastian-oo7xi4 жыл бұрын
Wow thank you! I am watching your content since I found it today. they where all really interesting and I am glad as a "normal land person" who doesnt know anything about these topics, to have people like you who manage to give me an understandable look inside! fascinating! And this video gave me an especially "wow" effect, too see how rust and other chemicals interactions can actually be so fatal in closed spaces over time, where you would normally never think about -or more so for "the rust itself weekenigs the steel, but NOT the gas mixture changing. Thank you and greetings from Germany
@82ndAbnVet3 жыл бұрын
That's why in construction we are taught to NEVER enter a confined space if a worker is found unconscious. We are to wait until someone with proper gear can go in there.
@A6Legit3 жыл бұрын
Same with working in the shipping industry with semi trailers. Most commonly dry ice can fill the trailer with CO2
@people2353 жыл бұрын
@@A6Legit There's a video of russian pharmacists for someone's birthday throwing a ton of dry ice in a hot tub and they were all jumping in and the ones who did died
@A6Legit3 жыл бұрын
@@people235 Wooow thats fucked. What kinda idiot pharmacists would do that?
@inspirion55003 жыл бұрын
0:14 why in some of your videos is this blurry line there? I mean it's not THAT big of a deal, I am just asking...
@Godzilla201913 ай бұрын
Sorry for being 3 years late it’s because copyright issues
@PJMontoya5 жыл бұрын
If you have the opportunity to open an enclosed/confined space and don’t know that you need training, then someone above you should be fired
@anondimwit5 жыл бұрын
@@Boof_dQw4w9WgXcQ no it is not their fault. also this was a example This video is just an example of natural selection. On every vessel are drills about entering and rescue from enclosed spaces which are monthly There are educational videos like this and you answer the questions or just following scenario for ex. Rescue someone from ballast tank. On every vessel there are plenty of imo pictograms/signs about entering enclosed spaces. There is a lot of procedures and every vessel Has to have oxygen/gas meter. And this things i mentioned are involved because of the accidents in the past, that's why the maritime law demands the things i said. If someone does not follow that, he is an idiot and that's a fact. And the final conclusion is: if You dont get it, ship is not place for you and this is for this persons safety and others.
@dickjohnson95825 жыл бұрын
@@anondimwit News flash: a large majority of companies/work sites dont give any safety training at all and dont give 2 shits about the law. Do you really think all 3 of them just forgot their training? I mean logically does that even make sense?
@anondimwit5 жыл бұрын
Dick Johnson it is a example mate
@anondimwit5 жыл бұрын
seigeengine good job you had nothing to add so you insulted me
@anondimwit5 жыл бұрын
Dick Johnson and using your logic they didnt forget it they were never trained then you say do you think they forgot their training reality flash a large majority of companies/work sites do give safety training and they do give 2 shits about the law
@stevenbramschreiber22292 жыл бұрын
Boy does this bring back lots of memories!! use to be on ERT for the Company I worked for (Semiconductor manufacturing)for 16 years...had 6 Security folks go down one morning due to remodeling being done in a closed off area(visqeen from ceiling to floor with little to no exhaust)..propane fumes from a forklift took one after another before we got on scene.
@janhansen5542 жыл бұрын
I heard like this story for 35 years ago, and it happends time and time again. Thanks for telling why its happening