OK,
Kevlar & safety helmet on.
This is another reason H&S gets a bad name IMHO.
OK DA is dangerous, so is a delivery van.
I bet delivery vans kill more people in the UK every year and cause more damage and injury too than does DA.
I don't follow what has happened since 1982/6 when I was an apprentice and respect for DA was drummed into me sometimes with a steel rule.
Perhaps the old ways were the best!
I can, I think, appreciate, but never agree with, the get rid of it coz it’s dangerous brigade.
As H&S advisors, if one is not fully familiar with the materials, product, process, procedure etc. and competent to do the work and deal with the product, process, procedure that one is looking at then you should be looking to external more competent advice.
Please, just look at the posts I make on here.
I may ask questions on, say a post related to skin conditions, however there are members here, one I can think of specifically who has forgotten probably in the last year, more than I have ever known about skin conditions of the hands, dermatitis of the hands, gloves, breakthrough times, chemical effects on the skin etc. (you know who you are!). I suspect that others can guess who I am talking about.
I don’t recall this person challenging my opinions & posts on say BS7671 issues.
I am not for a minute suggesting that the person is not competent to give some general and basic advice, however, it seems that they know their limits.
Most of the dangers from DA come from poor “housekeeping”, i.e. user error.
Now when I was an apprentice I HAD to learn the makeup of the interior of a DA cylinder, and be able to draw it and label it, from memory, in an exam. We had to know the safe pressures for use, FROM MEMORY.
Why, IMHO so that we understood what could go wrong, why it would go wrong, and what we needed to do to keep OURSELVES safe.
I still have a workshop unit, and yes we have oxy-da in there, rarely used.
It is in a large shared building split up into smaller units.
A year, perhaps two ago, there was a fire in an adjacent unit.
FRS attended, as did the other services, along with the majority of those renting units in the building.
I advised a senior FF that there was DA in my unit, they were not overly worried about this.
OK, the fire was in an adjacent unit, yes it was a masonry wall between.
In the end, yes we did remove the oxy-da on the trolley, but there was none of the sort of panic being suggested.
There are many dangerous things in this world, yes risks and hazards should be minimised, but don’t just “ban” things because they might be a hazard.
Please.