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Bho Disasters (PLEASE READ!)

When someone is that injured like the guy above ^^,

just drop the charges. Is there any punishment worse than the self imposed sentence he is now serving in that frail, burnt body of his?

I think not.
 

SkyHighLer

Got me a stone bad Mana
ICMag Donor
Veteran
"Test run for a first responder safety video"

http://youtu.be/MOYamWj2zDs


"Exploring the dangers of BHO labs for a first responder safety training video"

http://youtu.be/h1dZd7wQ3hw

"We provide hazardous materials training to hazmat teams from around the United States and Mexico. We also conduct school outreach to teach kids how science is applied in daily life as a hazmatter!"

When they used twenty cans they couldn't get the fire out even with a fire hose...
 
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jump /injack

Member
Veteran
http://www.krcrtv.com/news/local/fi...rtment-complex-blaze-in-east-redding/26276166

Another explosion inside the apartment building, serious burns and the person has been flown to a special unit for the injuries. In the comments a person said that there had been two other explosions and fires on [the day before] Saturday.

Firefighters battled a large structure fire in east Redding Sunday morning.

Related

Every available unit from the Redding Fire Department responded to 3100 block of Lawrence Road around 9:30 a.m. after receiving reports of an explosion in an apartment complex.

Multiple apartment units were burning as firefighters rushed to contain the blaze. Flames could be seen raging through the roof of the single-story building. One person was injured in the fire sustaining significant burns.

Battalion Chief Cullen Kreider, the incident commander, would eventually call a third alarm on the fire, meaning the city called in off-duty personnel, and asked for help from agencies outside the city. CAL FIRE / Shasta County Fire, Bella Vista, and Anderson were among the agencies who helped.

The fire was extinguished around 11:30 a.m. All told, 10 units were rendered uninhabitable by the fire. Four of those units were considered destroyed. The Red Cross is assisting displaced residents.

On Sunday afternoon, deputy fire chief Gerry Gray with the Redding Fire Department said the cause of the explosion and fire was the production of hash oil.

Hash oil or honey oil is a concentrate extracted from marijuana usually made using butane.

Redding Police identified the injured person as 27-year-old Christopher Hightower.

Police said Hightower was by himself inside of an apartment operating a marijuana honey oil extraction lab.

Hightower was transported to Mercy Medical Center for his injuries.

He was later flown out of the county to a burn center to be treated for his injuries and is in critical condition.




"It seems like a relatively recent trend of people who have figured out how to turn a benign plant into an explosive."


Burns of a 2nd and 3rd Degree type associated with Butane type explosions below:

http://www.google.com/search?q=2nd+...7Aqa_2QXS04CoDQ&ved=0CCcQsAQ&biw=1345&bih=841

Gray Wolf's safety tips below.
http://skunkpharmresearch.com/butane-safety/
 
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jump /injack

Member
Veteran
http://www.krcrtv.com/news/local/two-injured-after-alleged-butane-honey-oil-lab-explosion/26278504


Two injured after alleged butane honey oil lab explosion

OROVILLE, Calif. -
Two men are recovering in the hospital from an alleged butane honey oil lab explosion.

Cory Madison and Brandon Clark were air lifted to UC Davis Medical Center for burns they suffered in the blast Saturday.


The explosion happened around noon at the Country View Apartments off Grand Avenue in Oroville. Oroville Police said they got a call of loud explosion noises and smoke coming out of one of the apartments.

Once firefighters got on scene, they found canisters of butane along with large amount of marijuana.

Officers said they are several children that live in that apartment complex.

"Well fortunately, there were no children in the apartment, but even so they usually take a tally of children in the surrounding complex and add a count of child endangerment for each child,” said Sergeant John Bruschi.

The district attorney’s office is expected to file the charges this week. No word on how Madison and Clark are doing.


"It seems like a relatively recent trend of people who have figured out how to turn a benign plant into an explosive."

Burns of a 2nd and 3rd Degree type associated with Butane type explosions below:

http://www.google.com/search?q=2nd+a...w=1345&bih=841

Gray Wolf's safety tips below.
http://skunkpharmresearch.com/butane-safety/
 

hush

Señor Member
Veteran
"Well fortunately, there were no children in the apartment, but even so they usually take a tally of children in the surrounding complex and add a count of child endangerment for each child,” said Sergeant John Bruschi.

Good because that's the part I have the biggest problem with, involving these assholes. I hope they rot in jail for making explosives in the middle of a residential complex... No sympathy here.
 

SkyHighLer

Got me a stone bad Mana
ICMag Donor
Veteran
I posted videos of what the explosion looks like with varying numbers of cans of butane used back a few posts, these guys must be running dozens of cans in a closed room to get this kind of damage, but I've driven drunk, and I bet most of those who are going to rise up against BHO over this have also, let's see how bad the hypocritical response becomes, for surely it's coming.
 

oldchuck

Active member
Veteran
No, skyhigh, I have never driven drunk.

What I don't understand is the appeal of this low rent, totally stupid blasting. What do these people expect to gain? Is it economic? I don't see how. Do they get a better product? I doubt it. Is it the only method of extraction/concentration that they have heard of? What are their expectations? Opinions please.
 

jump /injack

Member
Veteran
"Here's the damage from bringing an evaporating dish with a quarter inch of butane/oil left into the house and having it catch on fire. "

http://youtu.be/bIJ8Rt96UDg

Hey SkyHighLer, good catch from YouTube. The guy was lucky that he didn't have more butane in the dish. This stuff detonates like a hand grenade when it goes off and in the pictures posted by the fire departments training film you can see what is happening, there appears to be a circle of fire. Within the fireball the heat is over 3000 degrees according to GrayWolf, anything within that fireball is 2nd and 3rd degree burn. A 3rd degree burn goes into the flesh and does a char burn and when the doctors cut it away leaves holes that have to be patched over in subsequent operations, if you're bending over to take a good look when the butane explodes you'll lose your face and hands and if your working barefooted the tops of your feet will be burnt black. If your wearing some sort of shirt and pants with a high content of rayon or such it melts and sticks, I can't even imagine how the Doctors and nurses peel that stuff off. DO NOT do this inside, you are containing the explosion in a small place which makes it more powerful and dangerous to everyone. If your in an apartment building the whole place can go up along with friends, neighbors, kids, dogs and cats, just this last week end in Northern California this very thing happened, read the post on how many were made homeless, how many were wiped out, lost everything in the ensuing fire. It cost $6000 to $10,000 per day in a burn ward, how much that pain costs I can't imagine. Get a closed loop device or go to a professional extractor, what ever he/she charges is nothing to what it can cost in pain, injury, property damage, attorney fee's and jail time. Sorry about the preaching.

"It seems like a relatively recent trend of people who have figured out how to turn a benign plant into an explosive."

Burns of a 2nd and 3rd Degree type associated with Butane type explosions below:

http://www.google.com/search?q=2nd+...7Aqa_2QXS04CoDQ&ved=0CCcQsAQ&biw=1345&bih=841

Gray Wolf's safety tips below.
http://skunkpharmresearch.com/butane-safety/

http://youtu.be/aDIWMp3cIPM Butane filled balloons, 3000+ degree's, see what that will do above in "2nd and 3rd degree burns. Thanks to SkyHighler for UTube site.
 
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jump /injack

Member
Veteran
Up date on previous explosion and fire.

http://denver.cbslocal.com/2014/06/03/failed-hash-oil-extraction-caused-april-warehouse-explosion/


Local
Failed Hash-Oil Extraction Caused April Warehouse Explosion
June 3, 2014 6:54 PM


DENVER (CBS4) - The attempted extraction of marijuana hash oil caused last month’s explosion at a Denver warehouse, CBS4 has learned.
Two men and a woman were burned in the butane-gas explosion at a “grow-your-own” marijuana facility on South Lipan Street.
No charges have been filed, but Denver police and the city’s fire department are investigating.
Gases trapped beneath a canopy ignited, causing the blast, arson investigators told CBS4. The facility rented tables for $350 for pot entrepreneurs to grow their own product and extract the hash oil, a process that uses butane gas.
At the Lipan location, investigators found more than 100 marijuana plants and pot cooking in pressure cooker-type devices. Boxes of butane canisters were also discovered.
Denver and state laws require medical-infused product licenses and permits to process extractions.
The explosion is one of several recent incidents in the metro area since the legalization of recreational pot. It’s unclear whether those involved in April’s accident obtained permits for hash extraction, which creates a stronger high through concentrated marijuana oil.

I can see no electric fans in the debris of the fire and explosion. This explosion is one that was outside but under a tent like covering so that the butane fumes weren't dispersed by wind or outside fans. For less than $200 fans would have stopped the accumulation of the fumes, three people were burned.

Burns of a 2nd and 3rd Degree type associated with Butane type explosions below:

http://www.google.com/search?q=2nd+...7Aqa_2QXS04CoDQ&ved=0CCcQsAQ&biw=1345&bih=841
 
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SkyHighLer

Got me a stone bad Mana
ICMag Donor
Veteran
"I can see no electric fans in the debris of the fire and explosion. This explosion is one that was outside but under a tent like covering so that the butane fumes weren't dispersed by wind or outside fans. For less than $200 fans would have stopped the accumulation of the fumes, three people were burned."

These Lasko box fans are less than $20 each from any Walmart or home improvement center in the US. I lashed them together with some cord, cable ties would have been even easier.

Use the fans on one side pushing air through the space.

The switches on the fans can spark, turn them on before extracting and don't turn them off until you're sure the butane has dissipated.

Even if you're outside you must ensure there is no nearby source of ignition.

See Figure 2, page 6 of this presentation, the exhaust fan isn't necessary if you're getting good positive pressure flow through from the inlet fans. https://www.dropbox.com/s/2r4c9u7tnlsk5kx/BHOfacility1.pdf

If you're thinking about extracting in your garage, think long and hard on it, imo even with fans you just can't get decent flow through.
 

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jump /injack

Member
Veteran
http://www.healthnewscolorado.org/2014/06/04/colorado-epicenter-for-hash-oil-fires-severe-burns/

Pictures at site, be sure to see what burns look like, click on URL above. This is an update from a previous story with more information.


Colorado epicenter for hash oil fires, severe burns

By Katie Kerwin McCrimmon

A 4-year-old’s toys and an infant entertainment center sat in the Littleton townhouse along with butane cans and pot trimmings when vapors from hash oil sparked and exploded earlier this spring.


Wayne Winkler suffered severe burns on his face and hands when he started a hash oil fire in his Englewood house in 2012. Uninsured, he spent two weeks in the University of Colorado burn ICU and the fire displaced Winkler, his wife and two sons for three months. As hash oil explosions spike in Colorado, Winkler is speaking out about the danger and urging others not to make the mistakes he did.
An 8-month-old lay asleep directly above the kitchen where 34-year-old Corbin Braithwaite later told authorities he was cooking “wax,” or hash oil from “shake,” marijuana discards that he regularly found when he went dumpster diving outside pot shops.

The two children and their mother escaped the explosion and fire uninjured, but Braithwaite — who regularly cared for the kids — suffered burns, and faces multiple arson, drug and child abuse charges. (Click here to read the arrest affidavit in Braithwaite’s case. Click here to see the charges he’s facing.)

Now that recreational marijuana is legal, Colorado has become ground zero for hash oil fires, with about 30 so far this year, far outpacing the rest of the country.


Home THC extraction labs that produce hash oil are triggering a rash of explosions.
During the first five months of this year, there have been six hash oil explosions in California, one in Hawaii and one in Montana, according to Kevin Wong, an intelligence analyst who tracks hash fires for the Rocky Mountain High-Intensity Drug Trafficking Area, a regional branch of the White House’s Office of National Drug Control Policy.

“We are the epicenter for all this stuff,” Wong said. “The number of explosions that we’ve had in Colorado far exceeds the number in all the other states put together.”

Like home meth labs, home THC extraction labs — as law enforcement officers call them — are now springing up across the state because the concentrated hash oil is so profitable, potent and relatively simple to make with marijuana and butane or other solvents. It’s especially attractive to some who make it because they can use discarded pot and cheap solvents.

When medical marijuana began to proliferate in Colorado in 2009, Wong said that year he had heard of only two Colorado hash oil fires. From 2010 through 2012, none were reported to police or fire authorities. In 2013, Wong’s office confirmed 12 of the fires and already is investigating about 30 in 2014.

Severe burns spike

Few people realize how dangerous the process of making hash oil can be. The highly flammable vapors from the solvents can trigger explosions and cause severe burns that generate massive medical bills, often for people who are uninsured.

The primary burn center in the Denver, the Burn-Trauma Intensive Care Unit at the University of Colorado Hospital, has seen a dramatic spike in the number of patients injured in hash oil fires.

In just the first five months of this year, the CU burn center has cared for 10 patients. Last year there were 11, and from 2010 through 2012, the hospital only saw one patient suffering a hash oil burn annually.


People who make hash oil from marijuana use highly flammable butane or other solvents.
“It’s so reckless and unnecessary. If we can bring these numbers down, I know we can benefit the rest of the country,” said Camy Boyle, associate nurse manager for CU’s burn ICU.

Boyle has been collecting data on the hash oil burn patients and recently presented her findings to a gathering of national burn specialists at a conference in Boston. She said health officials in other states including California, Oregon and Michigan are just beginning to see hash oil fire victims and that Colorado has a responsibility to ban home hash oil production and warn people here and around the country before more people get hurt.

Her study found that the hash oil burn patients are almost always men in their 30s. On average, they end up with severe burns over 10 percent of their bodies —primarily on their hands and face — and have to stay in the hospital an average of nine days. (Boyle and law enforcement officials are hosting a free class at the University of Colorado Hospital on July 25 to help fire, police and emergency health workers learn more about hash oil fires and the burns they cause. To learn more, click here. To sign up, click here.)

“They have a lot of pain and they struggle with it for many, many months, even up to a year afterwards,” Boyle said. “There’s a lot of nerve damage and there are psychological impacts. They have guilt and stress and anxiety.

“There’s a big impact on the patient and also on the health care system,” Boyle said.

Her study did not track how many patients were uninsured, but she said the preventable fires are hard on “patients, hospitals and everybody.”

‘A bomb in my hands’

Wayne Winkler of Englewood knows that pain all too well. Tears fill his eyes and he turns away as he recalls the agony of Nov. 2, 2012. On that day, he set fire to his own home, displacing his wife and two children, now 16 and 11, for three months and suffered severe burns that landed him at the CU hospital for two weeks.


Wayne Winkler suffered severed burns on his face and hands and had to spend two weeks in CU’s Burn-Trauma ICU. (Photo courtesy Wayne Winkler.)
A carpenter who used to work in the marijuana industry, Winkler said a friend had given him a bunch of “trim,” leftover cuttings from the plants.

“It’s just trash really. I had a couple bags of leaves. A friend asked if I could make him some butane hash oil,” Winker recalled.

He said he had made it five or six times before, but always outside.

“I don’t smoke it because it’s too concentrated for me,” Winkler said. “I’ve never had a problem (making it) in the past. It was cold outside, so I did it right here in the living room.”

Winkler used butane to extract the liquid THC from the plants. He had water boiling on the stove in the kitchen. As Winkler walked through his kitchen with a bowl of the hash oil in his hands, a spark from the stove leapt toward him. He saw the vapor tail dance through the air and knew he was in trouble.

“I literally had a bomb in my hands. The vapors had built up in my house and I had a super-condensed ball of vapors in my hands,” Winkler said.


The fire severely burned Winkler’s hands. (Photo courtesy Wayne Winkler.)
“Instantaneously, the fire tail jumped straight to the bowl and it exploded into my hands,” he said.

Winkler suffered severe burns on his hands, neck and elbows.

“My clothes saved me from burning completely up,” he said.

His wife and two sons weren’t home at the time.

“It was literally an inferno, a raging inferno. The whole wall from the floor to the ceiling in the kitchen was on fire. I fell back into the back room and dropped and rolled. I’m literally on fire and the oil rolled down my hands and burned my hands, through the full thickness of my skin.

“I go to grab the door knob and the door doesn’t open. My skin had rolled off on the door knob.”

Winkler had a fire extinguisher, but it didn’t work. He had a 35-gallon trash can full of water since he has a giant fish tank. As he dunked a pot in water and threw it on the blaze, he remembers seeing his own skin floating to the surface.

He threw water on the blaze, and at first, the fire seemed to grow. Desperate, he kept dunking the pot and pouring more water on the fire until he finally doused it.

Fire and emergency officials never knew about the fire because Winkler didn’t call 911.

“I was afraid to call for help,” he said, he said choking with emotion.

Instead, he tried to call his wife. With little skin left on his fingertips, he had trouble swiping his phone. Finally, he was able to call.

“I’m so sorry,” he told her over and over, then waited desperately for her to come help.

“I put my hands in the freezer to cool them off,” Winker said. “I didn’t know what to do.”

Burnt flesh, melted plastic

To this day, he remembers the smell of burnt flesh and melted plastic that overwhelmed him as he tried to cool his hands.

Winkler’s wife initially took him to Swedish Medical Center, where he felt the workers looked down on him because he was honest about how the fire started. Doctors at Swedish transferred him to CU because his burns were so severe.

Winkler said the pain was excruciating.


The pain after skin graft surgeries was worse than the excruciating pain of the initial burn, Winkler said.
“It never stopped burning. It was so intense, so deep, like a nerve that would not stop burning,” Winkler said. “They scrape you every day. They scrape and scrub your burns. It’s the worst pain.”

He ended up having to have grafts with skin from his thighs and said the pain after the grafts was even worse than the original burns.

The complications didn’t end when Winkler left the hospital. He got hooked on pain pills for several months. His physical recovery has been remarkable and the insurance company covered extensive repairs at his home. Winkler’s burn scars are subtle on his face and hands. Nonetheless, he doesn’t have the same mobility that he once did and hasn’t found as much carpentry work as he did in the past.

Winkler was uninsured at the time of the accident. A hospital financial counselor helped him get his bills paid, but he was unable to work for a year, which strained the family’s finances.

Despite all the difficulties, Winkler feels blessed to be alive. He is determined to try to prevent others from repeating his mistakes. If people want hash oil, he encourages them to buy it from dispensaries or pot shops, but not to try to make it themselves.

As Winkler lay in the hospital crying out from the pain and hearing the screams of other burn victims, he promised that if he survived, he would speak out about the dangers of making hash oil.

“God,” I said, “if you can get me through this, I’ll roar like a lion for you.”

Winkler now talks regularly about halting hash oil fires and attends support groups for burn victims.

He vividly recalls a burn victim from a water-heater explosion visiting him during his hospital stay.

The man gave him a simple message that he’s trying to give to others: “You’re loved. I’m here if you need me.”


"It seems like a relatively recent trend of people who have figured out how to turn a benign plant into an explosive."

Burns of a 2nd and 3rd Degree type associated with Butane type explosions below:

http://www.google.com/search?q=2nd+...7Aqa_2QXS04CoDQ&ved=0CCcQsAQ&biw=1345&bih=841

Gray Wolf's safety tips below.
http://skunkpharmresearch.com/butane-safety/

http://youtu.be/aDIWMp3cIPM Butane filled balloons, 3000+ degree's, see what that will do above in "2nd and 3rd degree burns. Thanks to SkyHighler for UTube site.
 

jump /injack

Member
Veteran
http://q13fox.com/2014/06/04/police-hash-lady-suffers-burns-in-drug-explosion/#axzz33jvc3mtx


Police: ‘Hash Lady’ suffered burns in drug explosion


SEATTLE — A South Park resident who allegedly went by the name “Hash Lady” is in the hospital after suffering burns during a hash oil explosion, police said.

According to Seattle police, firefighters were called to a trailer fire around 2 p.m. Tuesday near the intersection of 8th Avenue South and South Portland Street. Firefighters found a 36-year-old woman badly burned about two blocks from the trailer, and she was taken to Harborview Medical Center for treatment.

Firefighters extinguished the flames. The trailer suffered about $10,000 in damage and appears to be a total loss, firefighters said.

Neighbors told police the women was locally known as the “Hash Lady” and most likely using volatile chemicals to extract and produce hash oil when the fire erupted. Seattle police investigators allegedly found while while investigating the scene.

It is unknown if the woman has been arrested.

Making hash oil is illegal in Washington state, but it’s popularity has sparked a number of home grown operations that often result in explosions due to the chemicals involved.


Burns of a 2nd and 3rd Degree type associated with Butane type explosions below:

http://www.google.com/search?q=2nd+...7Aqa_2QXS04CoDQ&ved=0CCcQsAQ&biw=1345&bih=841

Read more: http://q13fox.com/2014/06/04/police-hash-lady-suffers-burns-in-drug-explosion/#ixzz33jvwqGqz
 

jump /injack

Member
Veteran
http://www.nbcsandiego.com/news/loc...ion-Fire-Mira-Mesa-Camino-Ruiz-262176421.html


Hash Oil Explosion Causes Fire
By Monica Garske | Friday, Jun 6, 2014 | Updated 5:04 PM PDTView Comments (0) | Email | Print

NBC 7 San Diego
The scene of the explosion and fire.
A hash oil explosion led to a fire in a Mira Mesa apartment Friday afternoon after three people attempted the process of extracting hash oil on their balcony, authorities confirmed.
The blaze sparked just after 3 p.m. at an apartment complex located at 10185 Camino Ruiz.
According to the San Diego Police Department, three 19-year-old residents were watching a video on how to extract hash oil and decided to try the process themselves on the balcony of their apartment.
During the attempt there was an explosion, which then caused a small fire.
Officials said all three residents were injured in the explosion, sustaining burns to their hands and feet.
They were each transported to a local hospital.
The incident remains under investigation, with the SDPD Narcotic Unit and Metro Arson Strike Team (MAST) handling the case.
This isn’t the first incident of this kind in San Diego, as hash oil labs are becoming more prevalent.
This past March, the manufacturing of hash oil led to an explosion in a North Park apartment that trapped a woman on her balcony. In February, a hash oil explosion destroyed an apartment in El Cajon.
In early January, an apartment building in downtown’s East Village area had to be evacuated after an explosion caused by a hash oil extraction using butane in a third-floor apartment.



"It seems like a relatively recent trend of people who have figured out how to turn a benign plant into an explosive."

Burns of a 2nd and 3rd Degree type associated with Butane type explosions below:

http://www.google.com/search?q=2nd+...7Aqa_2QXS04CoDQ&ved=0CCcQsAQ&biw=1345&bih=841

Gray Wolf's safety tips below.
http://skunkpharmresearch.com/butane-safety/

http://youtu.be/aDIWMp3cIPM Butane filled balloons, 3000+ degree's, see what that will do above in "2nd and 3rd degree burns. Thanks to SkyHighler for UTube site.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FnN8GHR6QO0 fire and explosions
 

jump /injack

Member
Veteran
http://www.kvewtv.com/article/2014/jun/09/two-injured-suspected-hash-oil-explosion-walla-wal/

Two Injured in Suspected Hash Oil Explosion in Walla Walla

By Dan Thesman. Published Monday, June 9th, 2014

At least two people are hospitalized following a suspected hash oil explosion this afternoon at a home in Walla Walla.

Firefighters responded to a home on the 500 block of Chase Avenue around 3:30 PM.

Two people were rushed to Providence St. Mary Medical Center, however the nature of their injuries is unknown.


We will update you as soon as more information becomes available on this developing story.

[Update in story: WALLA WALLA, Wash. (AP) — Police in Walla Walla, Washington, say two men have been seriously burned in an explosion that's believed to have resulted from a process used to extract hash oil from marijuana.

Officer Tim Bennett says 60-year-old Johny Ray Johnson and 32-year-old Thomas McCarthy have been airlifted to a Seattle hospital for treatment of second- and third-degree burns.


Two children and a woman at the rental property at the time of the Monday afternoon explosion were not hurt.

Bennett says the explosion collapsed part of the residence, and pushed exterior walls away from the foundation.

The extraction process involves the use of flammable butane.

The explosion is under investigation.] If you don't know what 2nd and 3rd degree burns look like take a look using the URL below. You do not just walk away from this type of explosion, you run away screaming and on fire with your fat melting. There has been no explosions or fires using a closed system in the last 12 months of their usage that I've been able to find, the cost of one day in a burn unit [$6000 to $10,000 or more] will buy 2 or 3 terpenators; think about it.

Burns of a 2nd and 3rd Degree type associated with Butane type explosions below:

http://www.google.com/search?q=2nd+...7Aqa_2QXS04CoDQ&ved=0CCcQsAQ&biw=1345&bih=841

Gray Wolf's safety tips below.
http://skunkpharmresearch.com/butane-safety/

http://youtu.be/aDIWMp3cIPM Butane filled balloons, 3000+ degree's, see what that will do above in "2nd and 3rd degree burns. Thanks to SkyHighler for UTube site.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FnN8GHR6QO0 Fire and explosions at a house where people were using butane, sounds like a war zone.
 
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Loc Dog

Hobbies include "drinkin', smokin' weed, and all k
Veteran
Thank you so much to jump/injack, skyhyler and others for their vigilance in education!!!!!!

I would never try BHO blasting. Only closed loop, and it still scares the shit out of me.

DO NOT BLAST!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 

Loc Dog

Hobbies include "drinkin', smokin' weed, and all k
Veteran
You should create public service, safety video, for youtube. If you get sponsors, could give some to charity. I would be willing to contribute information. Have read all GW has to say on safety.

Again, Thank You, guys!!!!
 

Loc Dog

Hobbies include "drinkin', smokin' weed, and all k
Veteran
Again, you should make video, for anyone considering any form of BHO. Not how to, but what not to do.

THANK YOU!!!!
 

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