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#11
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anhydrous amonia
The meth cookers steal it from farm supply depots. They often sotre/transport it in 25lb propane tanks. A friend found a "brand new" 25lb tank on the side of a busy highway. Took it home, hooked it up to his barbecue and damn near killed himslef and his family when the amonia came out. The fire department and police told him he was very lucky becasue anhydrous amonia is one nasty chemical. Every few weeks the police catch a mobile meth lab and they have to evacuate the area. They shut down I75 about a year ago when a mobile meth lab sprang a leak. The amonia burned the cookers pretty bad, and I75 was closed for about 12 hours. A cop told me that they are waiting for some meth lab to kill a neighborhood. Just what the world needs, some doped out moron using anhydrous amonia. I am amazed that there aren't more events. Terry Terry |
#12
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For info check out the MSDS for anhydrous ammonia.
http://www.wdserviceco.com/MSDSANHY.html This crap is something I want to avoid. Terry |
#13
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#14
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I've never been to Frenchburg, though I've been to Natural Bridge a
couple of times. Very scenic out that way. |
#15
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The Red River Gorge wilderness area is very close to Natural Bridge.
If you are willing to hike a few miles you can get awy from power lines, people and their noisy cars. With a DX398, or 2, and 2 roughly equal length pices of 50 to 100 feet of wire, and some nylon monofilimanet you can have a wonderfull easy mini DX party. While the ridges are best, even the valleys are very good. By using two roughly equal wire onteh DX398 we have found the addional wire makes singals several "S" units stronger. Not a dipole, but more as a counter-poise. Late fall and early spring are our favorite times. Fewer ticks and no crowds Even Natural Bridge is great in the off season. Just don't string an antenna on the brdige. ![]() Terry |
#16
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"Stephen M.H. Lawrence" wrote:
Funny - I worked for a radio station in Topeka, back in 1992. I've enjoyed a friendship with the station's chief engineer since then. We drove down to Prestonsburg to pick up a 50kW FM transmitter and its plate transformer, and stayed for the weekend in Salt Lick, KY, just a stone's throw from Frenchburg. We managed to have lunch in Frenchburg. That really is "God's Country," and I've thought ever since that it might be a nice place to retire. I was a teenager the last time I was there but I still remember the clean air, the rolling hills and all that Kentucky Bluegrass where it had spread all over the hills and mountainsides. The other thing i remember was how quiet the radio and TV bands were. There was no manmade noise on most bands so all you heard was a few radio stations or bursts of static when a storm was pounding away at a mountain top. Did you see "Broke leg Falls"? Its about ten miles from Frenchburg and a popular tourist stop. I moved a 25 KW UHF TV transmitter from Leesburg, Fl. to Destin Fl around that time. It took four 28 foot Ryder trucks to haul all the parts and the water chillier for the final tubes. The transmitter was built in '52 in nine, three foot square aluminum cabinets. It was a RCA TTU-25B which was one of the first "high lower" UHF transmitters. That transmitter was quite an adventure - the tower site was perched on top of a mountain overlooking Prestonsburg. We were driving a 20-ish-foot Ryder truck, and the road up the mountainside was impassable, mud, probably a foot deep. The road was *very* narrow, and the drop was (I kid you not) well over a thousand feet. A local contractor pulled us up the mountainside with an ancient Cat, and the swaying of the truck as we crawled up....Phew. I imagine the dashboard of that truck still has holes in it. I was lucky to have a "mountain side" seat on the way up. If I'd opened up the door, I'd have probably fallen at least 50 feet before the first bounce. Nice folks, though. I don't think I've ever felt so at home. I remember the traffic jams, too...just coal trucks. 73, Steve Lawrence I still have a few relatives up there. One of them had a big rock quarry called "Acme". Others farmed, made Sorghum and raised thousands of chickens. -- Former professional electron wrangler. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
#17
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wrote:
A cop told me that they are waiting for some meth lab to kill a neighborhood. Just what the world needs, some doped out moron using anhydrous amonia. I am amazed that there aren't more events. Terry That anyhdrous is nasty stuff. When it re-wets, it reacts violently with water, and destroys an amazing amount of lung tissue in a very short time. I am surprised that the gummint pays so much attention to pot, but leaves meth enforcement to the local sheriffs. 73, Steve -- Steve Lawrence Burnsville, Minnesota Every moment of a human life is an act of worship. Coincidence is God's way of being anonymous. |
#18
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![]() "Michael A. Terrell" wrote: I was a teenager the last time I was there but I still remember the clean air, the rolling hills and all that Kentucky Bluegrass where it had spread all over the hills and mountainsides. The other thing i remember was how quiet the radio and TV bands were. There was no manmade noise on most bands so all you heard was a few radio stations or bursts of static when a storm was pounding away at a mountain top. Did you see "Broke leg Falls"? Its about ten miles from Frenchburg and a popular tourist stop. I don't remember being there, so I'll bet that, if we went through, I was probably catching up on sleep. I moved a 25 KW UHF TV transmitter from Leesburg, Fl. to Destin Fl around that time. It took four 28 foot Ryder trucks to haul all the parts and the water chillier for the final tubes. The transmitter was built in '52 in nine, three foot square aluminum cabinets. It was a RCA TTU-25B which was one of the first "high lower" UHF transmitters. If I recall correctly, this was an RCA BTH 40, an "E" model, but it's been some time. We had an easier time than you, but it did take 6 men to lift and move that darned plate transformer. I enjoyed the "ride" back down, because I wasn't looking straight down. I'm surprised folks can raise sorghum there, but I don't know much about the soil conditions. Chickens, on the other hand, are a "snap." ;P 73, Steve Steve Lawrence Burnsville, Minnesota Every moment of a human life is an act of worship. Coincidence is God's way of being anonymous. |
#19
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Stephen M.H. Lawrence wrote:
That anyhdrous is nasty stuff. When it re-wets, it reacts violently with water, and destroys an amazing amount of lung tissue in a very short time. I am surprised that the gummint pays so much attention to pot, but leaves meth enforcement to the local sheriffs. ---------------------------------------- I am waiting for a cooker to blow a "make" and have a major leak that wipes out a few dozen to hundred. And HS is worried about al-Qaida. We have thosands of nut jobs brewing meth all over the country. In a desperate attempt to bring it under "control", the KY legislature has made it illegal for anyone to have more then about 26 allergy pills in their home. Yea that is going to really slow down people who will mess with something that will kill you. It is difficult to buy primary Lithium cells around here. Stores can't keep them on the shelf because the dopeheads steal them so fast. Ether starting fluid is also getting hard to get. Terry |
#20
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wrote in message
ups.com... Stephen M.H. Lawrence wrote: That anyhdrous is nasty stuff. When it re-wets, it reacts violently with water, and destroys an amazing amount of lung tissue in a very short time. I am surprised that the gummint pays so much attention to pot, but leaves meth enforcement to the local sheriffs. ---------------------------------------- I am waiting for a cooker to blow a "make" and have a major leak that wipes out a few dozen to hundred. And HS is worried about al-Qaida. We have thosands of nut jobs brewing meth all over the country. In a desperate attempt to bring it under "control", the KY legislature has made it illegal for anyone to have more then about 26 allergy pills in their home. Yea that is going to really slow down people who will mess with something that will kill you. It is difficult to buy primary Lithium cells around here. Stores can't keep them on the shelf because the dopeheads steal them so fast. Ether starting fluid is also getting hard to get. Terry It occurs to me that some folks add a couple of ounces of acetone to their fuel tank to improve gas mileage and clean their coked pistons and cylinders. I wonder if they're getting harangued for doing so? The same ban is in effect here in Uber-Liberal land; I can only buy 2 boxes of Sudafed (the only thing that kills those nasty sinus headaches I get 12-20 times a year) at a time. Like you, I highly doubt that any such effort will put an end to meth production. FWIW, meth has wiped out some communities in Iowa. It's truly evil. 73, Steve Lawrence Burnsville, Minnesota Every moment of a human life is an act of worship. Coincidence is God's way of being anonymous. |
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