saltydiscus@hotmail.com wrote:
I have a buddy who is an underwater welder. When he welds, there is a
danger of flamable gas buildup if he is working in an enclosed
structure underwater where the gasses cant escape to the surface.
Recently I built a stainless container that contained 12 spark plugs
(stainless) that were isolated grounds. The plugs would fire from one
to another at a rapid rate producing gas bubbles. The faster I ran the
spark rotation, the more gas bubbles were formed. I'm not a scientist,
but does this process sound feasible. I also need to know the crucial
storage pressure of these gasses so I don't blow myself up in my shop.
I am not a scientist, but more a mechanic. My unit has two guages to
read line and tank pressure, but I need to know the maximums at say a
high of 120 degrees ambient temperature.
I suppose I should retake chemistry.
What on earth are you trying to do ?
Graham
Receive a haz-mat citation, obviously.