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Thread: Florida Man Killed In Lacquer Explosion

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
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    Loveland, Colorado
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    164

    Exclamation Florida Man Killed In Lacquer Explosion

    A man was killed while remodeling a bathroom yesterday. Apparently he was spraying lacquer and then used an electric buffer on the floor without adequate ventilation, causing an explosion. Another man survived by jumping out a bedroom window, but was severely burned.

    Here's the article:

    http://www.local6.com/firstnews/9196012/detail.html

    Just something to think about when you're finishing. Safety first.

    Tim

  2. #2
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    Jun 2005
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    Glenwood, MD
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    That ought to be worth a Darwin Award

    When I was in college I was on the fire department. I went to a fire where the house was totally destroyed.

    The homeowner had just polyurethaned a room in a new addition. Being winter in Vermont it was cold and the poly wasn't drying. He decided to speed the drying process by heating the room up. He put a kerosene jet heater in the room. Turned it on and BOOM.

    His wife went to call the fire department and he told her not to. He was going to put it out with the garden hose. Did I mention that it was winter in Vermont?

    By the time we got the call and arrived on the scene the house was already 75% destroyed. We put it out but there wasn't anything left to save.

    -Alden

  3. #3
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    Feb 2003
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    Conway, Arkansas
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    13,182
    That boy must have had a LOT of "fog" in that bathroom to cause the explosion. I spray lacquer in my shop during the winter. No outside ventilation and it's not so foggy that I can't see the fire burning in my nautral gas heater at the end of my shop. To have an explosion, you need enough concentration of the combustible material to allow it to happen. A simple vent from the outside with a small fan can and does work wonders on reducing the chances of explosion in a close shop.

    Warning: Don't do as I do....as I can't be responsible for YOUR accidents but only my own.
    Thanks & Happy Wood Chips,
    Dennis -
    Get the Benefits of Being an SMC Contributor..!
    ....DEBT is nothing more than yesterday's spending taken from tomorrow's income.

  4. #4
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    Jan 2005
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    When I was a youngster I worked in a Lumber and hardware store. A man from the neighborhood came in and bought some Formica and contact cement. We did not see him for several months and one day I stopped his daughter at the bus stop. She said her dad was severly injured when the water heater came while he was gluing the countertop. This man lived but had burns and had to walk with canes.
    Charlie

  5. #5
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    SE PA - Central Bucks County
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    Oy, veh!!
    ---------

    And Dennis...you're scarin' me. Time to call Target Coatings and go water borne...
    --

    The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...

  6. #6
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    Jan 2004
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    Lewiston, Idaho
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    Fumes from a lot of solvents used in adhesives, finishes etc. can be extremely exposive. The warning labels on the cans aren't just there to reduce the liabilty of the companies that produce the products!
    Ken

    So much to learn, so little time.....

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Bedminster, NJ
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    292
    Just this week I read the obit of an 80 year old in this neck of the woods that died in a fire caused by a wood burning stove in his workshop - seems he was a personable fella who loved woodworking but was also a bit independent - so he tried to put the fire out by himself and succeeded only in putting out his own candle - so I guess no matter where we are, bad habits will get us in the long run - and if they don't something else will!!

    Ray
    Semper Fi

  8. #8
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    Mar 2004
    Location
    Arena, Wisconsin
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    1,272
    Sure glad that I kept my ignited Camel straight several feet away while using lacquer thinner!

    Frank

  9. #9
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    Meridianville, AL
    Posts
    345

    Darwin Awards

    Sad but true that a lot of people just don't read the directions or ignore common sense rules. A few years back a friends brother was burned to death when he and another fellow were cleaning grease off a garage floor with GASOLINE when the GAS FIRED water heater kicked on. It blew the house up and killed them both. With some Tide, hot water and elbow grease and these two could be playing with their grand kids now. We all need to THINK before we leap! Be safe out there!
    Last edited by Jack Wood; 05-12-2006 at 12:54 AM.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jim Becker
    Oy, veh!!
    ---------

    And Dennis...you're scarin' me. Time to call Target Coatings and go water borne...
    Not to worry Jim. I'm going to try some WB Lacquer. If it works well, then I'm switching.
    Thanks & Happy Wood Chips,
    Dennis -
    Get the Benefits of Being an SMC Contributor..!
    ....DEBT is nothing more than yesterday's spending taken from tomorrow's income.

  11. #11
    In my earlier "car" days a guy we knew was painting cars in his garage. He had just finished sparying lacquer on a nice Henry J (if you don't know, you're too young) and had opened the door and windows for a while to ventilate the joint. then he closed it up again to relax while it dried before buffing. He (tried to) lit a cigarette and tragically discovered he had reduced the lacquer to air ratio to the perfect level for a massive explosion that leveled the garage totally, killed him and threw the Henry J into the yard next door.
    Since then, I NEVER take any kind of fumes-related chances.
    "Because There Is Always More To Learn"

  12. #12
    Join Date
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dennis Peacock
    To have an explosion, you need enough concentration of the combustible material to allow it to happen. A simple vent from the outside with a small fan can and does work wonders on reducing the chances of explosion in a close shop.

    Warning: Don't do as I do....as I can't be responsible for YOUR accidents but only my own.
    Dennis,

    The fumes alone can and do cause fires. Such was the case with a fire that almost took my life when I was a kid. Gasoline fumes plus open flame. I'm lucky to be alive. I would encourage you not to mess with lacquer or any other combustibles w/o following adequate safety precautions. Even using a fan for exhaust is dangerous, unless it's one of the fans designed explicitly for the purpose of moving air laden with overspray from flammables.

    Mark
    Last edited by Mark Pruitt; 05-12-2006 at 7:50 AM.

  13. #13
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    Feb 2006
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    BTW, a second thought on this..... These kinds of "Darwin-esque" acts only serve the agendas of those who wish to make things like nitrocellulose lacquer unavailable to the public. In addition to killing himself, the guy in the story did all of us a disservice--minimal, compared to the grief of his family to be sure, but a disservice nonetheless by "proving" that lacquer is "dangerous." Lacquer is not dangerous; failing to follow safety protocol is dangerous.

    OK, I'll shut up and get off my soap box.....

  14. #14
    another guilty lacquer sprayer here! been spraying without a booth for close to 30yrs. .02 tod
    TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN; I ACCEPT FULL LEGAL RESPONSIBILITY FOR MY POSTS ON THIS FORUM, ALL POSTS ARE MADE IN GOOD FAITH CONTAINING FACTUAL INFORMATION AS I KNOW IT.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Somerville, MA
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    152
    They're finally building a new house on the lot in my neighborhood where the previous house blew up last year. Seems they were having the hardwood floors refinished in the 3rd-floor unit (of this 3-family house), and the finishers not only didn't turn off the power and gas and open all the windows like the instructions on the finish said to, but they <i>closed</i> all the windows to keep dust off the finish. Fumes built up in a stairwell and, well, boom. I think 2 of the finishers were killed instantly and the third died the next day with 3rd-degree burns over basically 100% of his body.

    Then there's the house under construction behind ours, where the previous house burned down in the massive cold snap a couple years ago after some brilliant fellow tried to thaw out the frozen pipes with a blowtorch.

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