About blew up everything within a 1/2 mile radius.... no joke

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  • e30loverSC
    replied
    yea it was quite the day. The gas line is in the process of being relocated. And today we are working on the final grades for the building pads and roads/ parking lots. Getting done with this chaotic job. Today we worked 15 hrs. I like working but damn im tired haha. Im used to the college life. Shit at least i have 3 more years of school.

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  • Sailor37
    replied
    Glad you made it out alive...

    You should go to church every sunday now, you are that lucky.

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  • SoEm0
    replied
    Man I did something similar a few years back. I used to drive large "C" sections of steel next to power poles. We were driving a large one with a drop hammer (500lbs metal hammer) hoisted up the pole with a capstan hoist (not sure how to spell it). Anyways we hit a high pressure line running right next to the pole. The gas that came up stalled out our gas powered hoist. We ran and called it in. We then had to help evacuate half a block of houses. Shit was a little scary.

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  • mrsleeve
    replied
    ^

    There is a SHIT LOAD OF WORK in PA right now. Most outfits cant fine enough hands to put all this shit in. Why wait till next summer, I can almost bet you could hire out with in a week if you really wanted to

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  • Rustyduktape
    replied
    Nice, my dad works for a natural gas company. Been out to a couple of the sites (they've been retrofitting a bunch of pipes and meter stations), and that shit is crazy. I'm gonna try to work on a pipeline crew next summer, it'll be hard work but damn good money.

    OP: glad nobody was hurt, that must have been pretty fucking scary.

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  • mrsleeve
    replied
    Originally posted by z31maniac
    Crazy, you guys should also look up high voltage arcs/explosions. Electricity does weird shit at medium voltage and up.

    We pulled though a electric and gas in the same ditch gas on top that was miss marked and it made one hell of a weenie roaster for about 4 hours since the electric arced and lit the 6" gas main on fire. That was the only time I have really ever been scared at work and my buddy just walked up outta the hole where the initial fireball went not 30 seconds before we got it.

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  • z31maniac
    replied
    Crazy, you guys should also look up high voltage arcs/explosions. Electricity does weird shit at medium voltage and up.

    I write the manuals to keep the navy guys from blowing shit up/hurting themselves.

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  • mrsleeve
    replied
    Originally posted by Rustyduktape
    Mrsleeve are you in the NG industry?
    UMMMM Yeah you could say that, I build pipelines for a living, lol


    I used to put in water and sewer main for a living, and had to dig around them all the time. Distribution lines dont bother me one bit, only about 70-100psi on them and they are plastic most of the time now a-days and there is lots of stretch and give in them if you do hook into one, fold it over with the hoe bucket as best you can and call the gas company and yeah you do clear the area but the chance of a blow up is nill at best.

    Now I work on the welding inspection side of gas and oil/products High pressure steel lines. Been busy as hell in PA the last few years on Big inch (24" and 30" mostly) High pressure transmission lines, those are the ones that cause the big issues with explosions as they have anywhere from 1200-3000PSI working pressure on them. When you cross these ROW's there is company man there the entire time you are near it to make sure you are not fucking it up.


    OP got tangled up in a medium pressure distribution line, I know just what happened too grade of the pipe came up right at the curb line and he clipped it right at that point, I have been in the very same place about 5 years ago with a 4" distribution line

    The little plastic service lines for houses I have just folded over by hand and kinked off like a garden hose and wrapped duct tape around them till the gas company guys get there to repair them
    Last edited by mrsleeve; 06-08-2011, 05:24 PM.

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  • e30e
    replied
    I dig around all things in the ground, was watching the Kinder Morgan guy search for a pipe line today while I was trenching in electrical line, its always my biggest fear hitting gas. Electrical doesn't really scare me as much, but if I hit fiber optic.....kiss my job good bye!

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  • Massimo
    replied
    Fuck I am a Civil Designer so work in this line of work. They never stress enough how dangerous gas lines are. I have seen a few videos of gas lines exploding DO NOT WANT.

    I have a funny story though, we had a contractor pegging out a site that was around a 66kv termination line, so he was specifically told to use wooden stakes. What dose he do use steel, anyways was banging one of the stakes in and on the second strike there was a massive bang the hammer flew up into the air and the guy got thrown about 10m. He survived, and had a LOL moment.

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  • FKNFASTM5
    replied
    i was just in Spartanburg, nice place. Kinda.

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  • Rustyduktape
    replied
    Mrsleeve are you in the NG industry?

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  • zxert
    replied

    Fuuuuuuuuuuuuuucccccccccccccck!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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  • mrsleeve
    replied
    found your self a medium pressure 4" plus main huh.


    Been there on a few different occasions. Really there was little danger of an explosion out side of the very immediate area. Unless you get it into the sewer system and get it into the correct concentrations in the stagnate air there.

    But you were right to shut the machine down. Not for risk of and explosion so much but to save the machine. The danger is that you will be sucking in enough NG to act as fuel for the diesel engine, and that will create a run away diesel. Have seen this happen on in old video tape form a hit on a 36" transmission line out in Southern ID form the early 80's
    Last edited by mrsleeve; 06-08-2011, 03:03 PM.

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  • rares
    replied
    glad you are safe... cool story by the way

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