Digit
  • Digit
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6 years ago
"AR" wrote:

"Pete Monkhouse" wrote:

I'm very tempted. A canary and a candle would be quite cool to take down a mine. Bit I still think calibrating both against an oxygen meter is a cunning plan.....



I've taken a candle and a Jack Russell terrier down a mine, as Simon will recall....

🔗85895[linkphoto]85895[/linkphoto][/link]



Looks like a serious attempt to consume all available oxygen.
~~~ The future is not what it used to be ~~~
Big-G
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6 years ago
Did you manage to get to Sir Francis over Easter ??
staffordshirechina
6 years ago
Why is it that people think that they used canaries to monitor oxygen??
Pete Monkhouse
6 years ago
"Big-G" wrote:

Did you manage to get to Sir Francis over Easter ??



I didn’t in the end. But having bought the meter I must do so shortly!
Pete Monkhouse
6 years ago
"staffordshirechina" wrote:

Why is it that people think that they used canaries to monitor oxygen??



I meant a Norwich City supporter. They are more expendable.
Big-G
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6 years ago
"Pete Monkhouse" wrote:

I didn’t in the end. But having bought the meter I must do so shortly!



Shame :(

But......with the weather getting warmer, summer on the way, water levels will be dropping :)

I've been trying to get in there for a few years now, missed out on one trip due to work, and haven't managed since :(

If anyone's planning a trip this year feel free to invite me, it's the one place I really need to see ::)
Boy Engineer
6 years ago
"Pete Monkhouse" wrote:

"staffordshirechina" wrote:

Why is it that people think that they used canaries to monitor oxygen??



I meant a Norwich City supporter. They are more expendable.



Back in the dim and distant, I think (having checked :)) the Coal and Other Mines Fire and Rescue regs required the manager to keep two small birds, without specifying the breed, for "testing for noxious gas". It's nice to know that getting on for 40 years later, this singularly useless bit of knowledge has finally been of use. I say useless, as everywhere I worked was covered by The Miscellaneous Mines Regulations, which for the uninitiated were a bit light on details; more of a "try and keep out of trouble" than the 10 Commandments of the coal industry.
inbye
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6 years ago
"staffordshirechina" wrote:

Why is it that people think that they used canaries to monitor oxygen??



As an aside, Monday just gone was the 60th anniversary of a disaster at Walton Colliery near Wakefield. The mines rescue team from Wakefield attended and whilst underground, a partially smoked cigarette was discovered in one of the canary cages, that was brought with the rescue team.

It was thought to have been innocently introduced at surface but I imagine there would have been some interesting conversations that day.



Regards, John...

Huddersfield, best value for money in the country, spend a day there & it'll feel like a week........

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