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Chinese worker playing with fire in a warehouse storing foam - Guangdong Provence

this is epe foam

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I didn't see a lot of information on this online, so I figured I'd share the story here. None of this writing is my own.

Industrial diver Alex Reed Paxton plunged into the bowels of Columbus' Lake Oliver Dam on Oct. 27, 2020, and never got out alive.

As he descended into the water along a floodgate chain looking for damage, his left arm was sucked into a high-pressure pipe, its valve inadvertently left open, and the suction's crushing power suffocated him.

Pinned by 850 pounds of pressure, the 31-year-old lost consciousness, and died in minutes. His body did not come free until workers found the valve control and released it, about 30 minutes later.

The 10-inch opening to the pipe that snagged Paxton's arm pulled water from a vertical space within the dam, called the headworks, where Lake Oliver's backwater flows through when the chain pulls open the dam's metal headgate.

The pipe, called a priming pipe, feeds water to what's called the penstock, another pipe about 20 feet in diameter, which at high velocity sends water to the turbines to generate electricity.

Opening the headgate to power those turbines first requires “priming” or “watering up” the penstock, Butler said. That requires opening valves to fill the penstock with lakewater.

Before a diver descends into the headworks where Alex Paxton was working, all valves controlling the flow to the penstock have to be closed, otherwise the differential pressure can trap the diver.

Georgia Power through its lockout-tagout safety checklist was supposed to have closed two valves where Paxton was inspecting the gate chain.

One penstock valve was a flapper, like the kind used in a bathroom toilet, and the other one was a gate valve controlled by a wheel, like on a water spigot.

First filed in Muscogee State Court in March 2022, before being moved to the federal level, the lawsuit accused Georgia Power not only of failing to close both valves, but of neglecting to note the gate valve even existed, on safety forms used at the time.

https://www.gpb.org/sites/default/files/styles/flexheight/public/2023-11/diver_lawsuit2.jpg?itok=yZUlkBuN

The utility showed the dive team from Glenn Industrial Group of Charlotte, N.C., a lockout-tagout list that didn't have that valve on it.

The flapper valve was noted on the form, and it was closed during the tag-out safety protocol.

The wheel controlling the other valve was behind a locked gate only Georgia Power staff had access to, the lawsuit said. That's what took so long to free Paxton.

Georgia Power since 2018 had contracted with Glenn Industrial for maintenance work on the dam.

In depositions taken for the lawsuit, witnesses said the company had a safety meeting with Glenn Industrial on May 27, 2020, when the gate valve was shown to the dive team.

Records showed Georgia Power broke the headgate gate chain to its Unit 2 turbine on Oct. 21, 2020, a week before Paxton's death.

With no mention on the tag out form, the gate valve noted during the May safety meeting still was overlooked five months later, when Paxton made his dive.

Georgia Power later corrected that oversight.

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A real trashy way of dying

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Wtf was she trying to accomplish by turning it on :marseybrainlet:

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Worker gets crushed by forklift load :marseybrainlet:

I don't know anything about the video.

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https://www.ibc24.in/maharashtra/worker-killed-two-others-injured-in-explosion-at-thane-factory-1325894.html

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Worker squished by a brick

Squished by a block or brick idfk prolly a repost but I hope not

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Woman gets twisted up in rotating machinery

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Worker crushed by a forklift

Worker tried to pull a tipping forklift and got crushed instead.

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Dude gets steamrolled with giblet aftermath

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