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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
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    Default Cutting oil drums warning

    Hi all
    Thought it time for a heads up caution on this activity. A work colleague was using an angle grinder with a 1mm cutter disc to cut open 200 litre oil drum.

    He said the drum smelt like the other 3 oil drums he had just cut. He had cut down to the last 60mm when it exploded and a sheet of flame came out the cut and burn't him from hip to ankle.
    He was working by himself and had to call the ambulance out and cart him off to hospital.

    It was a bad burn but the whole incident could have been worse. A similar accident killed a student in a Charters Towers school a while back.

    Thought it worthy of a mention here.
    Grahame

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  3. #2
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    Feb 2008
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    Deloraine Tasmania
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    Default

    good heads up there grahame.
    remember guys - stay safe

  4. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
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    Aust
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    Default

    Be also warned that many drums can contain hazard contents. In the old days of using 44s as scaffold a set of drums rocked up. 40% of them had a pesticide in them.

    The blue plastic drums are much better. Almost guaranteed that they wont contain fuel. No sparks, no rust, more flexible, lighter. Bloody fantastic.
    c2=a2+b2;
    When buildings made with lime are subjected to small movements thay are more likely to develop many fine cracks than the individual large cracks which occur in stiffer cement-bound buildings. Water penetration can dissolve the 'free' lime and transport it. As the water evaporates, this lime is deposited and begins to heal the cracks. This process is called autogenous healing.

  5. #4
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    Apr 2008
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    Sydney
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    I've heard that if a drum contained flammable liquid and you think its clean as a whistle, the seams can still contain some of the liquid. Then when you heat it with a grinder or oxy some of the fuel evaporates into the drum and boom! I've also heard some people have been decapitated cutting open drums. I always open them with a hammer and chisel but I suppose there is still the chance of a spark so I guess you gotta wonder what’s an open drum worth?

  6. #5
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    Jan 2008
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    Gold Coast, QLD
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    Quote Originally Posted by spooled View Post
    I guess you gotta wonder what’s an open drum worth?
    We buy fruit juice concentrate at the factory where I work in open top 200lt drums, it's not viable to send the empties back to the vendor (in Mildura) so we sell them to a local scrap dealer for $2each. Check the scrap metal merchants near you, you shouldn't need to pay more than $10 for one,including lid and clamp.

    Peter

  7. #6
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    Aug 2003
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    Wodonga
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    Quote Originally Posted by autogenous View Post
    The blue plastic drums are much better. Almost guaranteed that they wont contain fuel. No sparks, no rust, more flexible, lighter. Bloody fantastic.
    They don't work real well as a BBQ though.

  8. #7
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Location
    Perth WA
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    Thanks for the heads up Grahame.
    So is there a safe way to do this or just don't do it at all???
    Cheers,
    Rod

  9. #8
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    Default Safe way

    Find out if possible what was in the drum.

    Hit it with a bit of degreaser and flush out.

    Hammer and a sharp cold chisel.

    A couple of minutes work to take the lid off. Then cut the drum down to size with the grinder after there a bloody great hole in the top.

    With a big hole in the top ,the air vapour concentration is all buggered up and should not flash off.

    I have heard it said to put a car exhaust piped into a drum, but what if the motor is running rich? Ka Boomm!!

    Grahame

  10. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by rodm View Post
    Thanks for the heads up Grahame.
    So is there a safe way to do this or just don't do it at all???
    hammer and cold chisel is the recommended method

    ian

  11. #10
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Melbourne
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    I have cut a few drums up, and in future will try the cold chisel.

    I have occasionally needed to cut a drum into two halves with the ends intact. so what i do is fill them completely full of water, this should lift up any lighter than water or air explosive gases out through the bung. I also make sure I choose drums I know have only had veggie oil or something non flammable in them. this is hard though, as labels are no guarantee by any means.

    Then I run an air powered grinder around the middle of the drum to cut through. Gets a bit messy. I have done it with an electric grinder as well, but as you can imagine you run the risk of electrocution.

  12. #11
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    May 2008
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    Allendale East, South Aus
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    Would drilling a hole and then using an air nibbler work or would the steel in the drum be too thick?

  13. #12
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    The metal is not that thick about 25 or 30 thou.
    The air nibbler shoud have no probs if the stroke is deep enough to overcome the curvature of the drum.

    grahame

  14. #13
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    Jun 1999
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    Westleigh, Sydney
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    Grahame, years ago I read an article that basically recommended your method, but talked about using caustic soda in the water. Not sure why, perhaps as a degreaser?
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  15. #14
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Brookfield, Brisbane
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    you need to wash out well with hot watter and detergent then the cap left off and turned upside down overnight then they can relitively safely be cut in half.

    this is also the prcedure used when cutting the top off old gass bottles.

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  16. #15
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
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    Grafton, N.S.W.
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    G'day.
    I cut 2 Hydraulic oil drums in half long ways last weekend.
    1mm grinder wheel, no worries. When The 2 halves parted, there was about 2 litres of oil left in each drum.

    No kaboom.

    Welded reo bar legs on them for outdoor fire warmers for party this weekend.
    Hooroo.
    Regards, Trevor
    Grafton

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