J
jules18
Member
- Mar 1, 2019
- 94
So I've been thinking, since a few of us are waiting on updates on the Sarco machine, why not try liquid nitrogen in a car.
I imagine it wouldn't be that much different from a Sarco in terms of making sure air doesn't escape, comfort, and so on. Could pouring liquid nitrogen in a bucket inside a car be essentially the same as using a Sarco machine? could this work?
How much liquid nitrogen would one need for this method?
A few posts from the Sarco thread that are relevant here:
Would a plastic bucket be resistant enough to liquid nitrogen? how fast would it evaporate or create the gas cloud?
@Idorus what do you think?
I imagine it wouldn't be that much different from a Sarco in terms of making sure air doesn't escape, comfort, and so on. Could pouring liquid nitrogen in a bucket inside a car be essentially the same as using a Sarco machine? could this work?
How much liquid nitrogen would one need for this method?
A few posts from the Sarco thread that are relevant here:
Yup, no comparison with N.
I asked Philip once this question;
Dear Philip,
I'm all for Nitrogen but not with an exit-bag. So I would like to hear options of using Nitrogen in another setting.
Like: filling up a small space (like a tent or small bathroom) with Nitrogen in which you then temporarily reside with an oxygen-mask until the level of Nitrogen is high enough to put the mask off. I guess you'll then need a measuring tool and more than 1 nitrogen cylinder.
I truly hope you will address this.
Thank you and best regards,
And lo and behold, I got an answer back from the man himself;
Op 20-1-2018 om 09:20 schreef Exit International:
Possible, but the oxygen has to be removed eg by flushing, and for even a small volume room/ tent a large amount of gas is needed. Hence the Sarco that uses liquid nitrogen as the source
Sent from ProtonMail Mobile
At the time the existence of both gas and liquide was an eye-opener.
I assume, the liquid Nitro will immediately evaporate into a BIG gas cloud the moment you press that button inside the Sarco (correct me if I'm wrong).
@ here a wiki link about liquid nitro; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid_nitrogen
Yup, you're correct. I recently read of some idiot pouring liquid N2 into a swimming pool at a party, as a joke. The N2 cloud that formed on the water put two of the swimmers on the bus earlier than they might have chosen.
Would a plastic bucket be resistant enough to liquid nitrogen? how fast would it evaporate or create the gas cloud?
@Idorus what do you think?
Clinical and morphological aspects of death due to liquid nitrogen.Clinical and morphological aspects of death due to liquid nitrogen - PubMed
A 24-year-old student died while filling flasks with liquid nitrogen. The arms, legs and back were frozen and the face, ears and neck showed a dark red and livid colour with horizontal lines of demarcation. In the electrocardiogram, the heart showed asystolia followed by wide ventricular...www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Abstract
A 24-year-old student died while filling flasks with liquid nitrogen. The arms, legs and back were frozen and the face, ears and neck showed a dark red and livid colour with horizontal lines of demarcation. In the electrocardiogram, the heart showed asystolia followed by wide ventricular complexes. The patient was intubated orally as the situs of the larynx and pharynx showed no pathology findings. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation was carried out and terminated after 90 min. Unfortunately, the body temperature was not measured. The gas analysis of venous blood showed metabolic acidosis and oxygen deficiency. The student had worked alone with nitrogen, without opening the windows and without a working ventilation system. While filling the third flask he lost consciousness. As nitrogen does not cause characteristic prodromal signs he laid on the floor and was unable to help himself. The liquid nitrogen which was still escaping spread over the floor and vaporized. The student died from asphyxia due to oxygen deficiency in an atmosphere of nitrogen.
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