Anyone who thinks it cool to be driving round ****ed needs castration![]()
Fixed.
Anyone who thinks it cool to be driving round ****ed needs castration![]()
Think that pretty much answers the question![]()
“Parts-per” notation is used, especially in science and engineering, to denote relative proportions in measured quantities; particularly in low-value (high-ratio) proportions at the parts-per-million (ppm), parts-per-billion (ppb), and parts-per-trillion (ppt) level.
why are your threads always like this?
have you never watched any police tv shows?
like what?
Breathe heavily and rapidly for a short while before taking the test. It will cause a reduction in the reading.Nothing falls them.
Why would that change the reading?Breathe heavily and rapidly for a short while before taking the test. It will cause a reduction in the reading.
Why would that change the reading?
I would guess that he (or someone he read) is assuming that the vapour accumulates in the lungs and this will flush it out. Except AFAIK it doesn't accumulate: if it did then your body would just reabsorb it. Any alcohol vapour will be in equilibrium with your blood. All that will happen if you try this is that you will get light-headed. Not to mention the fact it will look a bit obvious to the fed holding the breathaliser.
Then there's the fact that most cars currently do NOT have evidential breathalisers, just indicative ones, so it's back to the station for a proper test anyway. Followed by a second one. You get the lower reading, but if the two were wildly different I assume that they'd do a third then leave the lawyers to sort it out.
M
If the two readings are wildly different, I presume it would either be rising if you only just stopped drinking (alcohol's absorbed very quickly so it would have to be *just* stopped), or because you're metabolising it (about 1 unit/hr median). But as you said, their meters are not evidential, and they need a blood/urine test to confirm.
I meant if you tried the same game at the police station and it actually did work (which I still doubt) for the first test. The alcohol would rapidly rise again, causing the second test to appear bigger (but actually simply more accurate). The two tests are done in quick succession, so no chance to hyperventilate between the two.
But I'm not sure what you mean by CO2 and ethanol being chemically similar?
M
Your mate is awesome.
I have heard the hyperventiliating thing only "works" for about 30 seconds or so after.
CO2 and ethanol are both lipid-soluble, so they cross the blood-air membrane very easily (cell membranes are made from phospholipids, so lipids can simply diffuse through, whereas polar substances such as glucose need special transporter proteins that span the membrane). That's one of the reasons alcohol's absorbed so quickly when you drink it.
Just tried this, it's true.Edit: Disclaimer - you should not hyperventilate and hold your breath after! Because the drive to breath comes from CO2 levels, you will be able to hold your breath for several minutes at least, and you may give yourself brain damage from low oxygen levels before you *have* to breath again.