I am an engineer officer on a ship. Last time on board, on one company'ship one engineer with one motorman and a wiper opened one of the ship's sewage tanks which scheduled for a period repair. Previously the tank was flushed with sea water as per company internal regulations. All the pre-entry approvals were obtained. Upon opening the tank's lid, a strong rotten egg smell erupted from the barely cracked manhole cover. One of the ratings was overwhelmed by the amount of H2S and fainted. The other rating attempted to rescue his colleague. He fainted as well. The engineer who was in the vicinity felt the urge to rescue the other 2 guys. He didn't do it but he raised the alarm. The rescue party arrived on scene and retrieved the 2 fallen men. Luckily they recovered themselves as the gas dissipated. The 2 guys were handed to a medical team for checks and they were OK. Should the engineer attempt to rescue 2 fallen guys he could have been the 3 fallen person. Remember - they only opened the tank, not even removing the lid yet. They had 2 gas meters, they had 1 blower that was supposed to be installed to ventilate the tank, lights, 3 radios in the correct channel, the briefing for the jos was done. A risk assessment was also available and was discussed the evening before. The only thing that was not done (because was not required by the rules) was to turn the gas meters BEFORE opening the lid. For sure it will change soon. During our periodic (every 3 months) Confined Space Entering training we are also covering the situation presented in this video (engulfing situation). In the maritime industry the main cause of death is exactly the situation I told earlier. In most cases the victims are double as almost the second person who is "the saviour" will collapse next to his victim.
You need to ventilate the tank before even opening the hatch. Not all tanks are built so that can be effectively done but they should be, at least when the tank is indoors and might contain high concentration of bad gases.
@@skunkjobb You didn't understand. Read again. To ventilate a tank you have to open it first. Do you know how a ship is built? Do you have any connections with shipping? I don't think so.
I worked at a grain elevator and maintenance needed it emptied for repairs, we emptied it and they called saying why is it still full we said that's impossible we ran to empty that silo all night, they said well so and so is walking on soy beans, we went back and forth about it being full and empty, turns out it had formed a plug at the top of the silo, if it had broke loose that guy would of fallen 150 feet if his harness wasn't attached.
I remember going to the county fair growing up in Iowa and the Future Farmers of America used to have a safety demo where you would sit in a wooden box and they would fill it with shell corn up to your chest and then tell you to stand up. You couldn't stand up no matter how hard you tried. The goal was to demonstrate how dangerous moving grain was and how little it took to trap someone and how it would take several people to literally dig you out.
she made it seem like it was nothing i literally work at the grain bins never gone through this training so that means i won’t ever get into a bin but no shit imagine getting paid barely above minimum wage to go do some shitty ass job if even done properly your suffocating in there regardless and don’t even get me started in the smell. imagine being trapped 80 feet above ground level in utter darkness just for your job that doesn’t pay hazard pay would you be scared?
@awright119021, that's exactly what training should instill in you. Take safety seriously or die! All accidents in grain bins or elevators are avoidable especially suffocation. Moving belts and other parts will not move! Never work alone. Notify all personnel you are entering the bin or silo. Lockout, tag out all power to sweep augers and post a guard at that location.
we had a farmer here in the uk fall in his grain silo and was soon engulfed by grain, the fire brigade were called and they had too cut a hole in the side of the silo too empty the grain and get him out unfortunately he was dead by the time they got him out,so training should be carried on all farms where they have grain silos and granaries where people might have physically go into the silo or work near silo
Very interesting and informative of the dangers of entering a silo. Well done, that lady or any volunteer that takes part in this demonstration and training exercise
I think for demo purposes, she and the rescue crew should have been wearing high quality dust masks! Don't underestimate the extra hazards from inhalation of that crud! She clearly stated it as a problem several times.... A seriously dangerous situation to find yourself in obviously, but for a safety demo.....maybe just add in extra protection!
My father was a fire chief and paramedic when I was growing up. A call where a farmer jumped in the bin that had a firm crusted top layer that gave way, was one of the most memorable and sad cases. They couldn't get to him in time. I think of that man often. I am glad you train for this type of rescue. ❤
a neighbar got freed from a cattle feed grain silo with a crane and he had torn ligaments and tissue in his joints on his feet from being pulled - but he was in a chute to narrow to dig out
I knew a guy working at a feed mill in Decatur tx in the late 80s who fell in a boxcar of corn while they were unloading it, he died, it was terrible. His name was Dusty Morris. 18 years old
Not grain silo, but i knew a girl who was riding on the edge of the box on a grain truck. She fell backward into the wheat and by the time the got the truck emptied out, she had suffocated.
I've never seen any method of grain silo rescue, and hearing about how much pressure is on you when partially (or fully) covered, it sounds like rescue technology like this is really needed. I would just add that they might need something for the dust, in case it gets unbreathable for someone in distress.
When you are using a chuckless drill you need to use your hand and the power of the drill to tighten the drill on the auger. So you need to grip the nose of the drill and have the drill go forward to tighten it up then switch to reverse.
Winnebago county Illinois here. We had a silo death a few years ago and the witness couldn't do anything for the victim. Would be terrifying for both parties involved. Always use safety gear. Even if your an old school farmer. Hell even back in the day they would tie off
That happens so fast if they worked like this you will be long gone.i worked on farms in the us and always thought of like a system that when you activate it the whole grain bin shoots apart with hydraulics or i dont know.will make a huge mess but lifes will be saved.like a emergency button when you slam it the whole bin comes apart.
So... you would need all that equipment and all those men to rescue you from a grain silo? What's the feasibility that you'd get all those resources in time; or have them readily available?
A vacuum is much better than that auger thing. Preferably a grain vac but a shop vac will work too. Use plywood for the walls. They're technically on the right track but far to clunky equipment.
@@farmerbill6855 I don’t think so, not at that thickness level. It’s a thin sheet so it can slide between the grain easily, plywood would be flimsy asf with the same thickness and would cause much more friction when being pushed down.
@@farmerbill6855that's an absolutely ridiculous statement. Just imagine a stick made out of plywood and the same dimensions bar of aluminum. You could break the first one on your hands and knee, no way you could do that with aluminum.
Everyone ignoring the choking, possibly flamable, dust she mentions over and over and over. This is a clunky, unworkable "solution". I wonder what damage her legs sustained being crushed by that "rescue wall" for so long.
The dust is ok, she's obviously in the office and not the terminal, so she's not used to it. As far as this being unworkable, I would be willing to bet this is one of the best products on the market for small time operations or older facilities. Rescuing someone is never easy work. Even the best practical equipment can be cumbersome and hard to manipulate even with practice. This is very typical of the kind of lengths it takes to save someone's life, but now imagine the race against time, the victim unresponsive, and everyone's panicking. We can not thank our emergency response teams enough!
Hopefully, the focus on this kind of accident and the expense of protecting against it will encourage people who handle grain to find some way to manage it without having people walking on it.
I worked in mineral exploration in northern BC years back, we had an older avalanche technician who didn't like to use the word "rescue" when he was warning us about high risk areas and reminding us to test our beacons, he preferred to use "recovery".
Did anybody think about the problem of using battery powered tools in an explosive atmosphere? I think for this situation an air powered drill would be safest. I would think that compressed air is readily available in a mill. Most cordless tools are brushless now but it would only take someone introducing an older drill with brushes into the situation in the "heat of the moment" to cause an explosion. The battery powered tools that I am aware of are not rated to be in an explosive atmosphere, so even a brushless would be technically unsafe. Also I suggest an adapter with the required female hex drive size to be used so people are not fiddling with the chuck adjustment in an emergency.
So what happens if you loop a rope under her arms, tie off anywhere, then dump grain until she's free enough to pull out? The rescue tubes seem unnecessarily complicated, to waste less grain?
I just went through training on this, it is because grain silos aren’t equipped with a dump, the only way to drain the grain is with the auger at the bottom, and doing that could very easily pull the victim into it and shred them. The other way to dump it would be cut a hole with a saw but grain dust is explosive, therefor there’s a lot of risk involved with that. Grain has a surprisingly large amount of pull and weight behind it, so even if you tie them off they could still be pulled in very strongly, breaking limbs or possibly even ripping the harness off and fully submerging them.
It would also potentially break their back or kill the casualty, the best way is literally a rescue tube and dig them out potentially with a rescue auger!
I think the issue is just the volume of grain. You see how long it takes even even they're blocking a ton of grain from coming in, imagine how long it would take to clear out an even bigger silo
i feel like this could be solved easily like put a really big door in every silo and get a remote that opens the door so that the silo will drain if u fall in there r prolly some engineers who’d slap me across the face if i suggested that tho so idk. but as of rn i don’t see why it wouldn’t work
if the silo starts to drain, it would sink the person under the grain which would die drowned, even if you try to do it fast in order to reduce this risk, this would create a lot of friction between the grain which can cause an explosion or ignition (as it happen every time a silo collapse). yeah, at first sight, I thought the same as you, but looking in several videos of real cases or try to rescue people trapped this way, we can see that this is not by any mean an easy solution.
Apart from other issues, the grain would be putting a ton of pressure on any door to the point that it would need to have incredibly powerful machinery to make it budge. Look at the kind of doors used in dam floodgates, and then consider that grain is 450-1000x denser then water
It would've been faster to hoist some cows up there to eat the grain. 🤦 A couple of heavy planks to keep her form sinking and drain enough grain to get free. 5 min and out. 💁
I work in a grain elevator. If you move you sink quicker. Best bet is to lay down as much as you can & hopefully you don't die by the time someone hears you. We have walkie talkies though, but you'll be dead in our bins within a few minutes. I always tell new coworkers if they fall in we won't be able to save them 🤷♂️
I thought a VACUUM! But that produces sparks- could blow EVERYONE up! A pneumatic vacuum would work, but who the hell has an unlimited supply of high pressure air??!! The ingersol rand towables would be handy. Bbut also a vacuum attatchment? Though one could possibly be made quickly with the right scraps around if you know what to do.
@@psychokiller9824she sure was. Especially the end when they asked her to step out and she said, "where do I step?" 🙄 step back in the grain hole, my god.
Probably to simulate the grain dust, I had to do similar training for the ambulance service as I'm a hazardous area response team medic, my job also occasionally involves overseas secondments and deployments! So I have to be prepared for most situations!
Companies are finally coming around to the idea: NEVER go into a bin with grain in it. They are realizing it's not worth the risk. Today this usually happens on the farm with nobody else around.
I agree this design isn’t very good at all and really not practical for saving lives because it’s not fast enough. I don’t know if vibration could work though. If there are other pockets the vibration could cause them to burst and they would become sucked in even deeper. Plus, it would kick up an immense amount of dust as well as cause friction making the whole situation highly combustible. Trying to pull them out without loosening them ALOT first could literally cause their bodies to get crushed or ripped etc. it all looks really simple at first, but then you realize physics exist and it’s not what it all seems from a glance. It gets real tricky real quick.
Don’t even let you kids play around grain silos, trucks, etc! Or near big sand/slate/gravel dumps. Kids die every year from it cause they have no idea how dangerous it can become in a split second.
Drink a shot every time she says dust!! Good grief.. God forbid a woman gets dusty. They needed a more brave volunteer.. “Don’t hit my head” etc. while wear a hard hat…🙄 Women….
one thinks she is doing a far quicker job with those scoops than those guys with that auger, they have no clue she needs to get out FAST, if her legs are constricted so is her blood flow, remember what happens in crushing injuries?[train or other vehicular crush]- they die if they get removed!!- the blood flow becomes toxic and these toxins get released into the body.
Si está atrapado asta el pecho mientras asen toda esa estupidez la persona muere . Hay que ser realista que con tan solo tirar de la cuerda si parte el cuerpo está afuera no es tan complicado salvarla
I never realised this was such a serious situation. Huge respect to you all, and the whole industry.
I hope she now understand how hazardous men's job is
@@pan2aja you must be swimming in 🐔 huh.
I am an engineer officer on a ship. Last time on board, on one company'ship one engineer with one motorman and a wiper opened one of the ship's sewage tanks which scheduled for a period repair. Previously the tank was flushed with sea water as per company internal regulations. All the pre-entry approvals were obtained. Upon opening the tank's lid, a strong rotten egg smell erupted from the barely cracked manhole cover. One of the ratings was overwhelmed by the amount of H2S and fainted. The other rating attempted to rescue his colleague. He fainted as well. The engineer who was in the vicinity felt the urge to rescue the other 2 guys. He didn't do it but he raised the alarm. The rescue party arrived on scene and retrieved the 2 fallen men. Luckily they recovered themselves as the gas dissipated. The 2 guys were handed to a medical team for checks and they were OK. Should the engineer attempt to rescue 2 fallen guys he could have been the 3 fallen person. Remember - they only opened the tank, not even removing the lid yet. They had 2 gas meters, they had 1 blower that was supposed to be installed to ventilate the tank, lights, 3 radios in the correct channel, the briefing for the jos was done. A risk assessment was also available and was discussed the evening before. The only thing that was not done (because was not required by the rules) was to turn the gas meters BEFORE opening the lid. For sure it will change soon. During our periodic (every 3 months) Confined Space Entering training we are also covering the situation presented in this video (engulfing situation).
In the maritime industry the main cause of death is exactly the situation I told earlier. In most cases the victims are double as almost the second person who is "the saviour" will collapse next to his victim.
You need to ventilate the tank before even opening the hatch. Not all tanks are built so that can be effectively done but they should be, at least when the tank is indoors and might contain high concentration of bad gases.
@@skunkjobb You didn't understand. Read again. To ventilate a tank you have to open it first. Do you know how a ship is built? Do you have any connections with shipping? I don't think so.
Таже ситуация с погребами в частных домах где хранят картофель. Погибали целые семьи, пытаясь спасти один другого.
This is why men should be paid more than women. Their job are dangerous
Hydrogen disulfide is no joke man. In the oilfield you always are keeping an eye on that windsock. Pulled one guy off location that was out cold.
I worked at a grain elevator and maintenance needed it emptied for repairs, we emptied it and they called saying why is it still full we said that's impossible we ran to empty that silo all night, they said well so and so is walking on soy beans, we went back and forth about it being full and empty, turns out it had formed a plug at the top of the silo, if it had broke loose that guy would of fallen 150 feet if his harness wasn't attached.
I remember going to the county fair growing up in Iowa and the Future Farmers of America used to have a safety demo where you would sit in a wooden box and they would fill it with shell corn up to your chest and then tell you to stand up. You couldn't stand up no matter how hard you tried. The goal was to demonstrate how dangerous moving grain was and how little it took to trap someone and how it would take several people to literally dig you out.
The rescue method in this video was mind blowing
So this would be way more lethal than quick sands ? …
I could get up
Shoutout to Keokuk and marshalltown from your neighbors to the north.
@@iAmIronMan0605sure, but still corny.
That looked terrifying for her and it was a simulation. I can't imagine the fear someone actually stuck would have.
she made it seem like it was nothing i literally work at the grain bins never gone through this training so that means i won’t ever get into a bin but no shit imagine getting paid barely above minimum wage to go do some shitty ass job if even done properly your suffocating in there regardless and don’t even get me started in the smell. imagine being trapped 80 feet above ground level in utter darkness just for your job that doesn’t pay hazard pay would you be scared?
😂😂😂
You’ll get over it someday.
Hope she gain experience to make better managerial decision in the future
@awright119021, that's exactly what training should instill in you. Take safety seriously or die! All accidents in grain bins or elevators are avoidable especially suffocation. Moving belts and other parts will not move! Never work alone. Notify all personnel you are entering the bin or silo. Lockout, tag out all power to sweep augers and post a guard at that location.
Those drills usually have a spark. Especially the ones with brushed motors. I heard from other comments that the grain dust can be flammable?
Very flammable
Explosive 💥
It's a brushless drill. The announcer said so.
@Jesse-Rodriguez good ears. Thanks for sharing that.
Any dust IS EXPLOSIVE! ... if fine enough.
we had a farmer here in the uk fall in his grain silo and was soon engulfed by grain, the fire brigade were called and they had too cut a hole in the side of the silo too empty the grain and get him out unfortunately he was dead by the time they got him out,so training should be carried on all farms where they have grain silos and granaries where people might have physically go into the silo or work near silo
Very interesting and informative of the dangers of entering a silo. Well done, that lady or any volunteer that takes part in this demonstration and training exercise
I think for demo purposes, she and the rescue crew should have been wearing high quality dust masks! Don't underestimate the extra hazards from inhalation of that crud! She clearly stated it as a problem several times....
A seriously dangerous situation to find yourself in obviously, but for a safety demo.....maybe just add in extra protection!
My father was a fire chief and paramedic when I was growing up. A call where a farmer jumped in the bin that had a firm crusted top layer that gave way, was one of the most memorable and sad cases. They couldn't get to him in time. I think of that man often. I am glad you train for this type of rescue. ❤
a neighbar got freed from a cattle feed grain silo with a crane and he had torn ligaments and tissue in his joints on his feet from being pulled - but he was in a chute to narrow to dig out
I knew a guy working at a feed mill in Decatur tx in the late 80s who fell in a boxcar of corn while they were unloading it, he died, it was terrible. His name was Dusty
Morris. 18 years old
Not grain silo, but i knew a girl who was riding on the edge of the box on a grain truck. She fell backward into the wheat and by the time the got the truck emptied out, she had suffocated.
Decades ago a guy I went to high school with.. his father died in just that way.. he worked in a grain elevator and got sucked down into the grain
I've never seen any method of grain silo rescue, and hearing about how much pressure is on you when partially (or fully) covered, it sounds like rescue technology like this is really needed. I would just add that they might need something for the dust, in case it gets unbreathable for someone in distress.
V E R Y unbreathabley dusty!
A mask would be so easy! Some are super breathable
When you are using a chuckless drill you need to use your hand and the power of the drill to tighten the drill on the auger. So you need to grip the nose of the drill and have the drill go forward to tighten it up then switch to reverse.
Winnebago county Illinois here. We had a silo death a few years ago and the witness couldn't do anything for the victim. Would be terrifying for both parties involved. Always use safety gear. Even if your an old school farmer. Hell even back in the day they would tie off
Its smart that they brought along that metal coffin. It should save some time when disposing of the dead body.
😂😂😂😂
That's dark! 😮
But also very funny
That happens so fast if they worked like this you will be long gone.i worked on farms in the us and always thought of like a system that when you activate it the whole grain bin shoots apart with hydraulics or i dont know.will make a huge mess but lifes will be saved.like a emergency button when you slam it the whole bin comes apart.
This is why I always carry a microwave.
😂😂😂
Lol that's something Dale would say too
I actually worked on a plank over a silo on school work experience. In those days we didnt even have hard hats.
So... you would need all that equipment and all those men to rescue you from a grain silo? What's the feasibility that you'd get all those resources in time; or have them readily available?
There must be a better way ...
Hopefully everyone would be that calm during a rescue
A vacuum is much better than that auger thing. Preferably a grain vac but a shop vac will work too. Use plywood for the walls. They're technically on the right track but far to clunky equipment.
Yep a large shop vac would do well too
Plywood would break
@@bobjamaica9045 not hardly, plywood is much stronger than aluminum.
@@farmerbill6855 I don’t think so, not at that thickness level. It’s a thin sheet so it can slide between the grain easily, plywood would be flimsy asf with the same thickness and would cause much more friction when being pushed down.
@@farmerbill6855that's an absolutely ridiculous statement. Just imagine a stick made out of plywood and the same dimensions bar of aluminum. You could break the first one on your hands and knee, no way you could do that with aluminum.
Neighbours 3 kids died a few years back playing in the back of a grain truck. Grain pile avalanched on them, tragic & horrible.
I'm so sorry to hear that. That is so devastating 😞
Everyone ignoring the choking, possibly flamable, dust she mentions over and over and over. This is a clunky, unworkable "solution". I wonder what damage her legs sustained being crushed by that "rescue wall" for so long.
The dust is ok, she's obviously in the office and not the terminal, so she's not used to it. As far as this being unworkable, I would be willing to bet this is one of the best products on the market for small time operations or older facilities. Rescuing someone is never easy work. Even the best practical equipment can be cumbersome and hard to manipulate even with practice. This is very typical of the kind of lengths it takes to save someone's life, but now imagine the race against time, the victim unresponsive, and everyone's panicking. We can not thank our emergency response teams enough!
Im curious if something like snowshoes would be wise to use.
Nope cause the usualy there îs a pocket which snaps n u fall into and than the top piles over
@@robsinternationalmusicbox true you would just end up getting stuck more if the grain falls on top of the snow shoe
She was a great sport!
Is this a common enough occurrence to warrant the equipment?
Unfortunately, yes. There were 22 cases of people trapped in grain in the US in 2022.
If it saves a life! Then yes.
Hopefully, the focus on this kind of accident and the expense of protecting against it will encourage people who handle grain to find some way to manage it without having people walking on it.
Yes many people have died
Quite common
One other big issue would be if you got to your chest area breathing due to the pressure of the corn may effect breathing…
I worked in mineral exploration in northern BC years back, we had an older avalanche technician who didn't like to use the word "rescue" when he was warning us about high risk areas and reminding us to test our beacons, he preferred to use "recovery".
if im not mistaking the grain dust can catch fire so why the power drill ? it makes sparks it can turn the silo in to a bom
Why not add PPE for sound and air quality safety?
I have a suggestion, if it is not renovated, it is like there is a roof and then it is given as a handrail, on the roof, make it all round
"I did not feel Jake get in". Poor Jake 😂
Did anybody think about the problem of using battery powered tools in an explosive atmosphere? I think for this situation an air powered drill would be safest. I would think that compressed air is readily available in a mill. Most cordless tools are brushless now but it would only take someone introducing an older drill with brushes into the situation in the "heat of the moment" to cause an explosion. The battery powered tools that I am aware of are not rated to be in an explosive atmosphere, so even a brushless would be technically unsafe. Also I suggest an adapter with the required female hex drive size to be used so people are not fiddling with the chuck adjustment in an emergency.
Maybe a some sort of heavy duty industrial vacuum could suck the grain out instead of using an auger.
Why they dont have a hex socket on the drill and nut ont the auger drive I'll never know
Working harder than smarter
Yep that drill shank drive is poorly engineered or lacking it. Wasted a lot of time trying to tighten a drill chuck on it,
@@richceglinski7543 It looks like a hex shaft to me. It just took a bit to get it tightened on there.
I know at our department we reto-fitted a driver bit to it
So what happens if you loop a rope under her arms, tie off anywhere, then dump grain until she's free enough to pull out? The rescue tubes seem unnecessarily complicated, to waste less grain?
I just went through training on this, it is because grain silos aren’t equipped with a dump, the only way to drain the grain is with the auger at the bottom, and doing that could very easily pull the victim into it and shred them. The other way to dump it would be cut a hole with a saw but grain dust is explosive, therefor there’s a lot of risk involved with that. Grain has a surprisingly large amount of pull and weight behind it, so even if you tie them off they could still be pulled in very strongly, breaking limbs or possibly even ripping the harness off and fully submerging them.
@@alexsawchuk5371Good points
It would also potentially break their back or kill the casualty, the best way is literally a rescue tube and dig them out potentially with a rescue auger!
Exactly!
I think the issue is just the volume of grain. You see how long it takes even even they're blocking a ton of grain from coming in, imagine how long it would take to clear out an even bigger silo
Is it possible to use air so it can work as powder paint in a batch?
What is the need to walk around in silos on top of grains if it's known to be dangerous?
I don't know what kind of grain that is but I'm in the mood to make some popcorn now
Why did he dump the scoop of corn on her head?
shows us one usage tip, NEVER trust someone's life to a battery drill!!!! use a HEAVY Mains powered one, to get that grain out FAST!!!!
Why did the wheat stalk win an award? It was outstanding in its field. 😂
My cousin died in a grain silo as a kid many years ago.
i feel like this could be solved easily
like put a really big door in every silo and get a remote that opens the door so that the silo will drain if u fall in
there r prolly some engineers who’d slap me across the face if i suggested that tho so idk. but as of rn i don’t see why it wouldn’t work
if the silo starts to drain, it would sink the person under the grain which would die drowned, even if you try to do it fast in order to reduce this risk, this would create a lot of friction between the grain which can cause an explosion or ignition (as it happen every time a silo collapse).
yeah, at first sight, I thought the same as you, but looking in several videos of real cases or try to rescue people trapped this way, we can see that this is not by any mean an easy solution.
Apart from other issues, the grain would be putting a ton of pressure on any door to the point that it would need to have incredibly powerful machinery to make it budge. Look at the kind of doors used in dam floodgates, and then consider that grain is 450-1000x denser then water
Great job !!
over engineerd to solve a problem where an solution should already have been implemented.
Those drills have a commonly unknow chuck locking mechanism, looks like operator was un aware of it
Love learning something like this, was csar, love to know. One never knows, this could be for many other situations.
Why won't they give this woman a dust mask??! Talk about obvious
So does it work without something draining it at the bottom.
What happens when two grains of wheat fall in love? They have a gluten-free wedding. 😂
Does this work with pigeons too?
Only at Russian "Grain Factories"
My friend tried to start a wheat farm in the ocean. I told him, “That’s going against the grain!”
It would've been faster to hoist some cows up there to eat the grain. 🤦 A couple of heavy planks to keep her form sinking and drain enough grain to get free. 5 min and out. 💁
I have yet to see someone actually try hard to get out tho like it seems like they just stand there I would be freakin out!!
They just can’t get out
Your locked in. Your more likely to tear your ligaments and muscle then getting out from struggling. Struggling will make you sink more.
I work in a grain elevator. If you move you sink quicker. Best bet is to lay down as much as you can & hopefully you don't die by the time someone hears you. We have walkie talkies though, but you'll be dead in our bins within a few minutes. I always tell new coworkers if they fall in we won't be able to save them 🤷♂️
@@Justin-zj7lrreally? How many people have died?
What’s going on?
She was just standing there.
What did they turn on?
@MattShine11 i think the movement of grain can happen when they move it into semi trailers and rail cars
So much of our food is stepped on 😂 all I got from this
You have no idea what I've seen go into our food.
Hard to stand there; in the pouring grain....
The moral of this story is never go inside a grain silo
Scary stuff!
Um, wouldn't a vacuum be a lot quicker?
I lost 2 friends this way about 30 years ago.
I found this interesting.
I thought a VACUUM! But that produces sparks- could blow EVERYONE up! A pneumatic vacuum would work, but who the hell has an unlimited supply of high pressure air??!! The ingersol rand towables would be handy. Bbut also a vacuum attatchment? Though one could possibly be made quickly with the right scraps around if you know what to do.
So unless thr grain is moving by a separate foece yoyre not going to sink? Surely dont go into a grain silo if its being drained?
Sometimes the grain will get stuck and form a false floor, and people will get in to try and inspect or loosen it and fall through
This can happen in any sort of grain bin…
Audio is very difficult to understand.
Kijk uit dit is gevaarlijk ⚠️
🖐️😫
So wear snow shoes in it... I mean serioualy though?
NO. It wont help when there is a cavity underneath, you will be sucked in even if wearing snow shoes. But than it will be much harder to get you out
why did he pour grain on her head
Because she was annoying
@@psychokiller9824she sure was. Especially the end when they asked her to step out and she said, "where do I step?" 🙄 step back in the grain hole, my god.
Probably to simulate the grain dust, I had to do similar training for the ambulance service as I'm a hazardous area response team medic, my job also occasionally involves overseas secondments and deployments! So I have to be prepared for most situations!
This seems incredibly slow. Am I missing something?
Did anyone else hear a fart at 1:05
Lmfao yes
It was a scooting chair, lol. That's funny though.
10/4 on the fart 😂🤠👍
Companies are finally coming around to the idea: NEVER go into a bin with grain in it. They are realizing it's not worth the risk. Today this usually happens on the farm with nobody else around.
Why couldn’t the bicycle stand up in the wheat field? Because it was too tired. 😂
TikTok brought me
lmao same
Total fail of a design. Lift harness and vibrator would of got her out of there faster. Risked her life for failed demonstration
Lift harness would have split her in two.
I agree this design isn’t very good at all and really not practical for saving lives because it’s not fast enough. I don’t know if vibration could work though. If there are other pockets the vibration could cause them to burst and they would become sucked in even deeper. Plus, it would kick up an immense amount of dust as well as cause friction making the whole situation highly combustible. Trying to pull them out without loosening them ALOT first could literally cause their bodies to get crushed or ripped etc. it all looks really simple at first, but then you realize physics exist and it’s not what it all seems from a glance. It gets real tricky real quick.
Don’t even let you kids play around grain silos, trucks, etc! Or near big sand/slate/gravel dumps. Kids die every year from it cause they have no idea how dangerous it can become in a split second.
If we dont send woman down there sometimes , they will accuse us of sexism.
That's how Gov Noem's father was killed. He went in to break a plug and it broke loose on him and sucked him into the grain.
A few super strength industrial sized vacuums, problem solved. This is way too complicated.
Why cou;ldn’t yolu have picked a guy that knew how to operate a drill driver?
Also why assume the person didnt fall head first. That seems far more likely.
always comforting when you remiond the smart white ppl this is spose to be behind me
Sangat mengerikan tenggelam dalam benda ini, tenggelam separuh badan sesusah itu penyelamatannya.
that augur seemed to be 100% useless
Drink a shot every time she says dust!! Good grief.. God forbid a woman gets dusty. They needed a more brave volunteer.. “Don’t hit my head” etc. while wear a hard hat…🙄
Women….
I wanna do that
It's corn! A great way to die! It's got the juice, it's like a big lump with knobs
Video starts at 1:13...youre welcome
thinkin about that clip of them pidgeons
one thinks she is doing a far quicker job with those scoops than those guys with that auger, they have no clue she needs to get out FAST, if her legs are constricted so is her blood flow, remember what happens in crushing injuries?[train or other vehicular crush]- they die if they get removed!!- the blood flow becomes toxic and these toxins get released into the body.
Hell yeah thats a DeWalt
Should have used a Milwaukee
Wheat were you thinking? 😂
Si está atrapado asta el pecho mientras asen toda esa estupidez la persona muere . Hay que ser realista que con tan solo tirar de la cuerda si parte el cuerpo está afuera no es tan complicado salvarla
That guy with the drill though... 🙄
I think this video is very grainy.
The rescue equipment looks more dangerous
Explosive flammable fine dust and elec motor probably not best of combo
Do not work alone.