[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Ozone and Safety



FWIW: I had a 3 foot tall Jacobs Ladder running continuously for 8 hours and
with normal ventilation motion, I detected no ozone at all.

Ted

========================
Subject: Re: fire safety

Original poster: "David Trimmell" <davidt-at-pond-dot-net> 
<snip>
Although not a expert (at anything ;-)), I would hazard that the "levels"
of O3 generated by a standard "indoor" Tesla Coil would not come close to
generating enough free Ozone to make a difference. Although deadly
concentrations can accumulate for many organisms (us!). Just IMHO.
<snip>

At 07:30 PM 8/23/00 , you wrote:
>Original poster: Tesla729-at-cs-dot-com 
>
>Hi Macolm,
>
>Although I am not personally trained in hazardous materials, I 
>would gander that ozone would considerably accelerate the ox-
>idation process of burning, since ozone is a very potent oxidi-
>zing agent. Anyone who has done much prolonged coiling in
>a relatively unventillated room can attest to the fact that exposed
>metal surfaces rust and corrode more quickly than -at- ambient
>conditions. I think a previous posting placed the TLV of O3 at
>0.5 PPM. Pretty potent stuff to say the least. TLV- Threshold
>Limit Value, PPM- Parts Per Million.
>
>Good, Safe Coilin',
>David R.
>
>
>