Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder

   / Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder #1  

Furu

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I took this shot a while back while stopped at a light. Just kind of caught my attention. This was on a local government agency work truck.

20160714_104345 red.jpg
 
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   / Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder #2  
Yeah, that'll get you a ticket most places. Many cops don't understand the DOT rules.
 
   / Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder #4  
Always one to learn. What am I missing?

Doesnt look strapped/chained.. Some people will tell you it has to have the cap on too, but I've many examples of where that is not the case.
 
   / Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder #5  
The regulator is connected. During transport they are required to have the metal valve protector cap screwed on.
 
   / Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder #6  
If it turns over it can bust the regulator off and that tank will become a missile.
 
   / Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder #7  
Most people have no concept of how dangerous a high pressure cylinder is
 
   / Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder #9  
The regulator is connected. During transport they are required to have the metal valve protector cap screwed on.

I have some dot approved caps that allow the reg to be connected and still secured. At least that's what I was told. I'm the guy that lets my bottles roll around in the back of the truck

Brett
 
   / Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder #10  
I have some dot approved caps that allow the reg to be connected and still secured. At least that's what I was told.

Locked-Cap.jpg

Looks like they have one on there, just not used at the time.


Also, they could have a floor mounted bottle rack we cant see..

SG6225.jpg
 
   / Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder #11  
My dad was a Cat mechanic for many years. One of his colleagues heard about a guy who had an O2 cylinder laying on its side, sitting behind a utility body door. He hit a bump, knocked off the regulator, and the tank blew the door open and launched across the mud flats along the bayshore freeway (US101, south of SF Airport) .

They never found it.
 
   / Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder #12  
We had a 120 cubic bottle fall over in the auto shop in high school, knocked the head off...It wound up two doors down in the Ag shop...
 
   / Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder #13  
You can see the safety cap folded down, not transport position.

I do remember many years ago a tank falling over in highschool, with valve open, and brass regulator fitting broke off, not complete valve, just made a lot of noise before I could walk over to it and turn it off.

Likely a good thing I was welding when they knocked it over as my sweaty glove stuck to the frozen valve once I had it shut off.
 
   / Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder #14  
We had a 120 cubic bottle fall over in the auto shop in high school, knocked the head off...It wound up two doors down in the Ag shop...

I took welding in high school and part of the training was changing O2 bottles and servicing the acetylene generator. Kids were changing O2 and knocked over one. Valve broke off. The rocket punched a hole through a concrete block (the old heavy ones) wall and ripped through a car door across the street, wound up on the front seat of the car. Mucho power in there.
 
   / Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder
  • Thread Starter
#15  
View attachment 476424

Looks like they have one on there, just not used at the time.


Also, they could have a floor mounted bottle rack we cant see..

View attachment 476425



That is what caught my eye. The cap was not in the secured position for transport.

Actually the regulator caught my eye then I noticed the installed protective cap was there but that it was not in the secure/transport position.
 
   / Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder #16  
I took welding in high school and part of the training was changing O2 bottles and servicing the acetylene generator. Kids were changing O2 and knocked over one. Valve broke off. The rocket punched a hole through a concrete block (the old heavy ones) wall and ripped through a car door across the street, wound up on the front seat of the car. Mucho power in there.

Yep. Similar pressures to a SCUBA tank, and I know of several cases where one of those has punched through a cinderblock wall.

I suspect that most human bodies would not do much better at stopping one of those.
 
   / Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder #17  
That is what caught my eye. The cap was not in the secured position for transport.

Actually the regulator caught my eye then I noticed the installed protective cap was there but that it was not in the secure/transport position.

The regulator gauge show pressure. Probably the tank valve is open to match the open protective cap.
 
   / Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder #19  
   / Great way (not) to transport your oxygen cylinder #20  
In my two cities the counties are completely AR about having everyting at the latest codes. When looking at the photo it looks like the protective cap that Midnite had posted had vibrated open. Still not safe, and thanks to everyone who answered my dumb question.
 

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