I suspect his injuries was caused by hot hyd fluid spraying on him, and not the close up pressure that causes the bursting skin and muscle. Hot hyd fluid can spray probably 10 ft or more. Some of the guys on TBN have been sprayed when a hose burst, but due to distance and pressure, and temp of the fluid, not much damage, other than clean up. Hydraulic fluid in the eyes is not a good thing either.
When my brother was young, he was cleaning parts in a bucket full of, what we think was, gas and kerosene mix, and after about an 30 min of him soaking his hands, he started to hurt, and said his hands felt like they were on fire. He could not touch anything with out hurting. They suspected that the cleaner was absorbed in the skin, and the body reacted. We put lotion on his hands, but they hurt for about a day,
OK i understand about the different kinds of injuries from the fluid.
I've seen equipment underground get a leak & spray close to 20ft.... In the mines its about 50 deg. & with all the big fans running it can be cool at times, and everyone wore long sleeve shirts or light weight coveralls....that's what saved him from getting burned on his arms, but getting sprayed on his face & neck was worse.
I remember when it happened and the foreman shut down all equipment...We had 3 EMT's in the mine that had 2 sections, and they took him down to the power box where they kept the first-aid kits and a man-trip for emergencies....He had what looked like hives on his face & neck... One EMT said that he had never seen someone get burned like that before underground.
And underground you can't get cleaned up very well if you get sprayed with the fluid....I have seen the "continuous miner" get a leak on the boom & the operator not even know it's leaking & spraying into the "shuttle car" operators face until someone flagged him with their light.... and the
fluid in the equipment gets very hot because the equipment stays running 3 shifts 6 days a week.
(You talking about your brother cleaning parts in the fluid.)
I was getting a hair cut & i heard some old timers talking about that... and they said it hurts really bad, and one guy said that his
hands turned real red like a bad sunburn.
This thread should remind members of the dangers of "hydraulic fluid"
* I have a question for you J_J,
I have a friend that is a logger & he has his own dozer & truck... I was up his house a couple weeks ago and i saw him doing something that i thought was dangerous, and probably wasn't good for his stile chainsaw bar because its so thin.
When he changes the hydraulic fluid in his equipment he saves the fluid & uses it in his chainsaw bar.
I told him that it was too thin & he could get it in his eyes....But he said that he has been doing that for years
What do you think about that ?____I don't mean to get off topic.