pizzachang
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P Diddy Denies Sexual Misconduct Allegations 120 New Accusers Emerge
pizzachang replied to Social Media's topic in World News
And the Democrat Party in the USA loves him and his support. "When will they ever learn" as B.Dylan said. I think they won't ever learn. -
Big bike forced off road by car on Bangkok highway - video
pizzachang replied to snoop1130's topic in Bangkok News
Yes, using turn signals causes all other road users to be aware of what you intend to do - making driving safer for everyone. -
7 Types of Used Cars to Avoid in Thailand
pizzachang replied to CharlieH's topic in Thailand Motor Discussion
I think this is because there is a tendency to develop leaks. So a yearly inspection might catch them. -
Thai Police Bust Multi-Million Baht Sex Toy Smuggling Ring
pizzachang replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
Does this imply that "legal" 'sex toys' exist ? -
Why would anyone "accept the results of a rigged election"? That's just common sense.
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Harris is far to the socio-fascist left of Biden. He never made the decisions, during his almost 4 years. The fascist cabal made all the disastrous decisions - there are plenty. Imagine being so stupid that you'd vote for a proven failure system of government? Harris wouldn't actually make decisions either, but the reason many Democrats don't like her, is she lacks intelligence, not cunning. And cunning can't be trusted to bow to the socio-fascist puppetmasters.
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Humans are more efficient at killing each other. Human nature hasn't changed, is a best guess. Humans are habitually slaves to their desires [including myself] So choosing the 'desire' is paramount in self-control. Since the science of mathematics has definitely disproven Darwin's theory, and the science of mathematical probabilities has proven a 'mind' behind the universe, maybe humans will self-examine again soon?
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Interesting. We never used these types of aids. Just as a reference, an ammonia leak would have to be extremely small to be able to use such an item, since the ammonia is under a lot of pressure, and if it's out of control by valves, you'd need protection to get close. I can certainly see the use, in a remote, field condition situation, as in a tiny leak in a large tank. Thanks for the conversation
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I'll try and respond in order. It is quite possible that the valve couldn't be closed (various reasons, including corroded parts inside or simply to much escaping gas) Remember, it's under pressure to keep it liquid. To my knowledge, limited to my years of service ending in 2008, there is no "leak stopper" or sealer. Maybe there is now, I haven't kept up. #2 Ammonia likely was already fully expended from the system in the Thailand leak - up to the next closed valve. In the case of say, a 100 lb. refill tank (looks like a big lpg tank but beefier) a faulty valve or unscrewing past a certain point will be a big surprise to the tech. Once I had an assistant who did exactly that on a routine replenish to our holding tank, and the 100 lbs of instantly converting liquid to gas, emptied in about 3 or 4 seconds. I had time to stop him from trying to rethread the valve - even with heavy rubber gloves, he would have had frostbite or worse. This much ammonia dispersed quickly, but the surrounding businesses complained a lot. By the time the complaints reached the city's manager, even the smell was gone. Remember, 5ppm can be detected but it's not really a danger - think of household ammonia sold in the US ( I never see it in Thailand) The fire was out of control in our situation before the f.d. arrived and the decision was made by them & plant managers to let it finish but contain it to the building. The bad part was the various materials other than ammonia that burned, insulations, paint, oils, and lots of paper/plastic packaging supplies. But the ammonia was long dispersed. #3 Location of sensors, their maintenance would be the factor here. The sensors we used had a industry setting 25 ppm, set in potential leak areas at around 6 feet. They require periodic maintenance to do their job. I'd guess that the leak (Thailand) was small enough to be contained and don't know if the particular location of the leak could have been tied to any automatic shut-off. Usually these sensors are tied to a sound warning for the particular area; then any responder had to have the proper gear to enter the area; first to assess the location, turn off adjacent valves or see the situation is serious enough to allow the expulsion to finish and then fix the problems. Remember, NH3 dissipates very quickly and containing an active leak depends on different factors - of responders, equipment quickly available and the actual amount of NH3 that is involved. A train tank car is much different than a small ice plant's storage or refill vessels. Here's some photos of the one I witnessed. As you can see, the location was about as good as they get for quick dispersion of the ammonia.
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The most common reason for larger leaks. We used a check system and even had actual key locks for valves that were normally closed and a tag when you removed the lock to use the valve. Ammonia does have to be added to the systems periodically, because ammonia does leak, even through the tiniest of openings - the good thing is you can smell a leak at 5ppm and that is when action needs to be taken.
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Well, as I said maintenance is the key in systems like this. Interesting enough "oil" is essential in maintaining the integrity of piping and valves. I witnessed an explosion of the ammonia tank at a fish processor in Alaska - across the street from our ice plant - 4000 lbs of liquid ammonia. The resulted cloud dispersed relatively quickly because of the location in a bay, but the fire took some time to extinguish. This accident started with an rusty valve in a supposedly unused section of piping. The engineer (a very competent tech that I knew personally) had his mask and an assistant, and were aware of all the possibilities; the threads at the valve broke (corroded from the inside - ammonia is corrosive - much less so if there's enough oil in the system.) and they ran outside and then attempted to turn off another valve that "could" supply that piping, but too late. Neither were injured but did get some serious inhalation - ammonia turn chemically into sulfuric acid when it contacts the moisture in your lungs. We used sulfur "sticks" to locate small leaks and those are terrible to inhale too, but the masks work very well. So, in a guess, a leak unattended, a rusty pipe corroded inside and looking perfectly normal outside, or just not double-checking a refill procedure could have caused this one. The storage tanks are usually regulated and inspected but do require safety valve replacement by time in service, at least in the US.
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It disperses quickly. One of the cheapest, and very efficient refrigerants. Ice plants use it because it's inexpensive and highly detectable. One thimble-full of liquid ammonia will empty very large room quickly, as humans will not tolerate concentrations above 100 parts per million. 50ppm is the international exposure level over an 8 hour period (work shift) Humans can detect 5ppm by smell. As long as maintenance is done on valves, piping and compressors, ammonia is safe enough, compared to undetectable refrigerants. Maintenance is the key [my experience in ice plant maintenance, repair and rebuilding Vilter compressors]
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Mine says FTT on every deposit to Bangkok Bank NY - Bangkok Bank here in Chiang Mai prints the 12 month print out (usually takes two weeks or less) But I've noticed that the last 1 year renewal of NON-O, that the officer just looked at the summary from Bangkok Bank (required document) and simply added the print-out to the "finished stack". Maybe someone else looks at it later, during the "consideration period"?
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I just did mine myself using the US Embassy "new" policy. More trouble than the previous renewal procedure 10 years ago. However, the Letter is a required document at Chiang Mai. Reading the instructions for "transfer of visa stamp", a verification from the Embassy is required. Since the US Embassy no longer issues such letters (along with many other services) you can download a form letter from them, stating as much. This was accepted by Thai Immigration and actually getting the que number to the "transfer visa" window, took about 3 hours total, including 30 minutes wait at the window counter.
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Would Thai citizens be paying "taxes' on their "pension income"? Somehow, this is more confusing than I thought. Pension funds are not "earned income", in any sense. If a pensioner was "earning" interest on funds brought into Thailand, I could see a case being made to tack on taxes, but otherwise... nope.