Oracle wrote:Hello CG!
I believe Gasman cleared the place out whilst demonstrating how he lives up to his nick.
Thanks to Brownian Motion ... Declared safe ... for now!
cyprusgrump wrote:Oracle wrote:Hello CG!
I believe Gasman cleared the place out whilst demonstrating how he lives up to his nick.
Thanks to Brownian Motion ... Declared safe ... for now!
Thank goodness... they'll be flooding in then...?
Perhaps in future we should get some extractor fans and not rely on Brownian...?
Oracle wrote:cyprusgrump wrote:Oracle wrote:Hello CG!
I believe Gasman cleared the place out whilst demonstrating how he lives up to his nick.
Thanks to Brownian Motion ... Declared safe ... for now!
Thank goodness... they'll be flooding in then...?
Perhaps in future we should get some extractor fans and not rely on Brownian...?
Yes, quick! He's back!
Adapt an Air Conditioner. Suck him out! For goodness sake he will suffocate us all ....
cyprusgrump wrote:Oracle wrote:cyprusgrump wrote:Oracle wrote:Hello CG!
I believe Gasman cleared the place out whilst demonstrating how he lives up to his nick.
Thanks to Brownian Motion ... Declared safe ... for now!
Thank goodness... they'll be flooding in then...?
Perhaps in future we should get some extractor fans and not rely on Brownian...?
Yes, quick! He's back!
Adapt an Air Conditioner. Suck him out! For goodness sake he will suffocate us all ....
Or we could open a window...?
It is blowing a gale here at the moment, with a window open we'd get more air changes per minute than an executive jet!
Which reminds me of an interesting story about smoking in aeroplanes....
cyprusgrump wrote:If you insist...
When smoking was allowed in aeroplanes (the older of us remember), the air quality was better than any other environment...
Anti smoking campaigners tried to get smoking banned, complaining that cabin staff shouldn't have to breathe in second hand smoke...
The bans originally started on flights of less than two hours but were then extended to all flights...
As a result of the ban, airlines didn't need to change the air in the cabin every minute or so and reduced it dramatically...
Cabin air quality has actually reduced as a result and the cases of deep vein thrombosis have goon through the roof...
Which reminds me of a story about DDT....
cyprusgrump wrote:If you insist...
When smoking was allowed in aeroplanes (the older of us remember), the air quality was better than any other environment...
Anti smoking campaigners tried to get smoking banned, complaining that cabin staff shouldn't have to breathe in second hand smoke...
The bans originally started on flights of less than two hours but were then extended to all flights...
As a result of the ban, airlines didn't need to change the air in the cabin every minute or so and reduced it dramatically...
Cabin air quality has actually reduced as a result and the cases of deep vein thrombosis have goon through the roof...
Which reminds me of a story about DDT....
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