Three
workers were burned. One worker's injuries
were so severe that the individual had to be flown by helicopter to a burn
unit. The worker is in critical condition. The other two workers were taken by
ambulance to a nearby hospital. They have since
been released.
The
local fire department was called at 5 AM about the flash fire.
"It was a machine they were
working with and it was pretty instantaneous, Fire Chief said. "We're
working on putting it all together now."
He
said the flash fire was out before responders arrived. There was no damage to
the building, just minor damage to the machine that caused it.
"It's
a real quick flash and it's done with," he continued.
A nearby employee
who witnessed the fire — described it as similar to a lightning strike in that
the fire quickly “flashes” then immediately extinguishes itself
“It appears the worker was just in the wrong spot at the wrong time,” the
Fire chief said.
The news video state that the worker was operating a grinding machine that malfunctioned. Could the flash fire be an electrical arc flash?
Please comment.
UPDATE: Injured worker has been upgraded to fair condition.
UPDATE: Injured worker has been upgraded to fair condition.
4 comments:
I would not believe arc flash from a 110 v hand grinder. Metal particulate from a grinding operation into exposed 480V switch maybe but there is nothing in the article to make that leap.
Wow....fire chief stated employee was just in the wrong spot at the wrong time. I guess we'll see if the litigation process agrees.
Interesting to see a flash fire is such a facility. usually when one thinks of a flash fire, some type of solvent or flammable liquid (involving a release of vapor) comes to mind, but the article indicates a possible electrical arc. Was there conclusive evidence with an investigation?
What about metal dust? Could there have been explosive levels in the air?
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