ChatterBank1 min ago
Ouch!
// An electrician nearly died in a horrific and bizarre work accident when he was 'inflated' by a pressurised air line which went up his bottom.
Dad-of-one Gareth Durrant, 26, was wiring a caravan at the factory where he worked when the large pipe - carrying compressed air at around 300lbs per square inch - shot up his back passage.
He was rushed to hospital where scans revealed a six-inch tear in his bowel and severe damage to his intestines. He then faced hours of emergency surgery to save his life while wife Sarah, 25, waited anxiously with their toddler son Daniel, three.
He was unable to eat properly as he was vomiting food and now suffers agonising stomach pains and cramps as well as depression, anxiety and panic attacks. //
http://www.telegraph....factory-accident.html
Terrible but strangely amusing.
Dad-of-one Gareth Durrant, 26, was wiring a caravan at the factory where he worked when the large pipe - carrying compressed air at around 300lbs per square inch - shot up his back passage.
He was rushed to hospital where scans revealed a six-inch tear in his bowel and severe damage to his intestines. He then faced hours of emergency surgery to save his life while wife Sarah, 25, waited anxiously with their toddler son Daniel, three.
He was unable to eat properly as he was vomiting food and now suffers agonising stomach pains and cramps as well as depression, anxiety and panic attacks. //
http://www.telegraph....factory-accident.html
Terrible but strangely amusing.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Gromit. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.modeller
I agree - the story was in Metro newspaper this morning, and whilst it described the accident, it failed to state exactly HOW the nozzle got where it did.
My only encounter with an air line is when pumping up tyres in a petrol station, and they tend to fly all over the place unless you hold them steady.
All seems a bit odd.
...and really very painful - the man's insides are all...messed up.
I agree - the story was in Metro newspaper this morning, and whilst it described the accident, it failed to state exactly HOW the nozzle got where it did.
My only encounter with an air line is when pumping up tyres in a petrol station, and they tend to fly all over the place unless you hold them steady.
All seems a bit odd.
...and really very painful - the man's insides are all...messed up.
i agree is sounds like one of his idiot workmates did it for a laugh...thinking hed just get a shock...and when he saw the actual consequences he played dumb...
these things dont just blow air out randomly, they have to be triggered. and they also dont force themselves between peoples buttocks...if anything it woudl be the opposite...the force would blow them the other way...
only other explanation, is he was alone and did it himself either for sexual kicks or just to see what it was like and thought he could pull it out in time before it started to hurt ....but obviously he doesnt want to admit that...
these things dont just blow air out randomly, they have to be triggered. and they also dont force themselves between peoples buttocks...if anything it woudl be the opposite...the force would blow them the other way...
only other explanation, is he was alone and did it himself either for sexual kicks or just to see what it was like and thought he could pull it out in time before it started to hurt ....but obviously he doesnt want to admit that...
-- answer removed --
We used to have an engineerin the North Sea who would make machine guns with them.....long tubing for the rifle, a "t" extension bracketed off it, into which he would load ball bearings and then the air line behind it with a trigger.
Quite successful in nailing sea-gulls...........
This must have been an unfortunate accident.....i.e. his mates messing around.
Quite successful in nailing sea-gulls...........
This must have been an unfortunate accident.....i.e. his mates messing around.