I've fixed broken mercury columns in thermometers by putting them in an ice/salt mix to get the mercury down into the bulb. Wonder if it works with the alcohol jobs? I've never tried.geni said:
You are heating a sealed tube in a flame. You clearly have stronger nerves than I do.
That goes double for me. Fifty lashes with a wet noodle for you, Jon in London.Mr. Skinny said:
Gaak![]()
Please come work at my lab Wyvern. I bow down before you.Wyvern said:
That goes double for me. Fifty lashes with a wet noodle for you, Jon in London.
Oh, and stuff it!
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I could tell you about a real doozy but, well, that wouldn't be right since it's in litigation.![]()
Getting ill or injured is not fun at all - despite what a few people who are off on disability would have you believe. Weigh the risks. I would much rather take a few extra minutes of my day to take some simple precautions than to take a chance of having a mishap.
I thought you said you broke your ass at work; performing the duties of pregnant women and women on maternity leave, wasn't it?American said:I don't work at all! They pay me to look like I'm working. It's the same thing, you figure out pretty quickly. Bare minimum performance, and you get paid the same as someone with words like "superior" on their yearly review.
Originally posted by Crossbow:
People drink, then drive cars.
People sky-dive without the proper equipment.
People ride motorcycles without helmets.
People work on live electrical lines without checking to see if the power is off or not.
etc.
Lab workers are no exception either!
Shane Costello said:Anyone got a good centrifuge story? I've heard from people who knew people who worked somewhere else where someone didn't balance the centrifuge properly, and the thing ended up going at speed through a solid brick wall.
Reminds me of my first lab job, longer ago than I care to remember. The prof and I were spinning something down in the teaching lab's horrible tabletop centrifuge; it had a poorly designed (or damaged, I don't remember) lid, which flew off in the middle of the run. Next thing I knew, I was UNDER the table with no clear recollection of how I had gotten there. I looked up, and there was my boss staring back at me from under the other side of the table. Whereupon we both went into fits of hysterical laughter. (I hope they retired that centrifuge, though.)Jon_in_london said:
Havent seen that, but I have seen a large Beckman walking across the floor and a very pale postgrad gawping at it.
Stupidest thing I have ever done with a centrifuge:
It was a bench top jobby for pulsing down 1ml microfuge tubes that had been knocked up in the departments maintainance dept. It was originally a coffee grinder!
You didnt have to have the lid closed for it to spin. I put my tubes in and with my fingers still holding the top of the tube I pressed the 'on' button......ouch! Tore my glove and was a bit sore but really hurt self esteem!
Only the one I told on the previous page.Shane Costello said:Anyone got a good centrifuge story?
I can't say I've never stopped these things by hand myself though. There was a refrigerated centrifuge I used while I was doing my PhD work which had no lock. Even though someone stuck a cartoon on the wall above it, showing a technician being strangled by his tie caught in the works, I still meddled. Which is why you need the locks.I had a biochemistry technician who deliberately jemmied the safety catch of the centrifuge so she could reach in and stop the rotor with her hand. When I protested, she said "I don't have time to wait for it to stop by itself." We had to replace the whole damn machine.
Rolfe said:Only the one I told on the previous page.I can't say I've never stopped these things by hand myself though. There was a refrigerated centrifuge I used while I was doing my PhD work which had no lock.
Originally posted by Jon_in_london:
It was a bench top jobby for pulsing down 1ml microfuge tubes that had been knocked up in the departments maintainance dept. It was originally a coffee grinder!
