Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Chinese air...

Cut'n'screwed more siding up on the south side today.  Noticed something interesting when I started on the SE container.  I'm drilling pilot holes into the top edge of each container - into a piece of square tubing that was welded up and sealed when the containers where manufactured.  The first hole today and I heard air rush out once I punched through.  That container was manufactured in Shanghai China in April of 1999.  That was some old Chinese air I just let loose in Texas. 60,78,39,0,B

10 comments:

just.Bob said...

中國屁

Meadowlark said...

Haha... My dad used to always joke when I would burst bubble wrap that I was letting in dirty China air.

John Wells said...

shawn and Meadowlark basically have the same comment....cheers!

Mr_Brown said...

John will now be known as Patient Zero.

remmij said...

— what's a chinese phart? seriously, how would something like that stay pressurized for 13 years? must have been an A#1 welder...
Longhorn Hopper - "Do not remove a fly from your friend's forehead with a hatchet."

DEL said...

Be careful there. I saw a guy grinding on a backhoe gantry when it exploded. He was burned pretty good. The story is that if there was moisture when it was welded up it corrodes and produces hydrogen gas, he had ground through the rust and sparks went into the H gas. It was a BIG bang. I would drill a hole before I started any spark producing work on a closed section of pipe or tubing.

MontelloOffGrid said...

Thanks John. Thanks DEL. Good to know!

I like them trusses!!!

tffnguy said...

Everything else in Texas is from China now days. Now I guess we have some Chinese air to go with it.

Carlos said...

Doesn't have to be a perfect seal to cause a rush of air. The original air inside leaked out long ago but in microscopic hole allow air in and out at a slow rate. Add a few degrees temperature difference and whatever air inside become excited and pressurizes. The military has been using this idea for years for storing ammunition long term. Air molecules can get past seals but water molecules can't. Used to have ammo cans popping and whistling when exposed to direct sunlight back in my day.

Allen Hare said...

An interesting concept. I think the folks who drill core samples into Greenland's ice layer have found similar air pockets, only thousands of years old.