Liked the one about self-stabbing with hot filler wire. Did that early on during an O/A project.
Right after, the wound was the same size as the dauber on the end of the wire. Then it grew. For 5 days. It leveled off somewhere around the diameter of a nickel and took 3 weeks to heal. Good times.
A good one that I haven't heard a lot of times before happened to me back in school. They had some kind of ill conceived sequential ventilation system so that room 1 got fresh air, room 2 got room 1s air, room 3 got a mix of 1 and 2, etc.
It was a rainy day and the "shop manager"
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
was applying varnish or an oil coat to some sort of wood project (yes, in a welding lab) he had been assigned in order to stay busy.
The fumes would coom over to room 2, where all of us students were welding in those delightful cubicles, and when we'd light up some sort of reaction would take place and make the fumes quite nasty. Not a dramatic explosion kind of thing, just a slight chemical change.
Anyway, we all got sick and blah blah blah.
So watch out for that kind of thing, especially when someone starts telling you about how TIG is a safer process to use in environments that are generally unfriendly to welding. There's more than sparks and suffocation to be worried about.
Sent from an earthen ditch outside Needles, CA using an awful lot of low voltage single strand wire.
It's a matter of flour and water and then there's the seasonings, which is a matter of salt and so forth and then you h-we interrupt this for the announc