• ccdfa@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Not much. You really shouldn’t be going into grain bins, and if you you do get stuck you should call for help and shut off anything that’s making the grain move. If you have to go into the bin for some reason, there should be someone outside with you and you should have a safety rope to help pull you out. Covering your mouth won’t help for long if at all. Someone will need to put up fans to ventilate the bin. You will suffocate in a grain bin and I’ve lost friends who went into bins.

    https://www.ndsu.edu/agriculture/ag-hub/publications/caught-in-grain

    • Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 year ago

      You’d think by now there would be some kind of emergency quick release or some such. I don’t know what but in any other industry I feel like there are regulations in place so the murder box has some safety features.

      • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        I’d imagine it’s just one of those things where the safety feature for the murder box is just properly labeling the murder box, and making sure people who go in it are covered in ropes and safety equipment to pull them out if it starts murdering them.

        Like people who have to go work in confined spaces like sewer tunnels. You can’t really put safety gear into the tunnel, so you have to just make it hard to get there, label it, and make it possible to quickly get people out when it goes wrong.

        • Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 year ago

          True true, very good points. And apparently the murder box was indeed labeled.

          and make it possible to quickly get people out when it goes wrong.

          I think this is the part that needs work. If the only real solution is to cut a big hole in the side of the thing to let the grain out, maybe I don’t know, a door? Like an emergency hatch that can be opened from the outside? Or even with a remote that the person inside could have on their person before entering. The remote could even be pressure activated so if pressure of the grain is crushing you it will automatically open the hatch.

          • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            I think they use a rope harness that keeps you from going down too far, and then they basically need to come dig you out if you do get pulled it.
            That’s what I was implying with the sewer worker comparison, since they don’t get an escape hatch, just a harness, rope, and winches.

            I’m willing to bet if you flipped to the next page after this diagram, it would say something along the lines of “and that’s why you always wear your harness”.

            My guess would be that a door at bottom wouldn’t be able to let out enough material to free someone trapped at the top before it jammed up. When they empty them they only don’t jam because something is taking the grain away.