A bit too much pressure.......

Soldato
Joined
10 Jan 2007
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Warwickshire
So, this happened at work today, the skip is fed by a pressured system, we have a macerater that has a pipe connected too it to suck the waste into this skip, seems something went wrong

syDYvBL.jpg
 
Surely the problem is not enough pressure? Looks like it has imploded? Must have been an impressive force.
 
That's an implosion, not an explosion. Must've been one hell of a vacuum to do that.

Actually no, that looks more like a force from above. Going by the location of the dent, I'd say the lorry driver screwed up and did that with his hydraulics.
 
LOL true, I guess it was sucked, no idea how though, onsite we can only turn the air on or off
 
I always though it was a differential in temperatures that caused this...

I think Diddums seems right though, looks more like an impact.
 
Nah, that's been done with vacuum - the side is pulled in as well.

That was my initial thought too, but then the damage from the top and the way the steel is creased seems to suggest it was struck from above. The sides could easily get pushed in like that in the event of an impact, they're only a few mm thick (we had these exact skips at my last job).

I don't think the top damage is consistent with an implosion.
 
Go take more photos of the scene, we need more info. If anyone asks you wtf you're doing, tell then a bloke on the internet asked you to take photos in return for Haribos. It'll be fine.
 
That was my initial thought too, but then the damage from the top and the way the steel is creased seems to suggest it was struck from above. The sides could easily get pushed in like that in the event of an impact, they're only a few mm thick (we had these exact skips at my last job).

I don't think the top damage is consistent with an implosion.
In fact given the loads this would have been under when the ram was operating, I doubt a vacuum would generate sufficient force. I’m more inclined to say the ram has fouled on something inside and pulled it in from the inside.
 
If you suck the air out of a vessel not built for holding a vacuum, you end up with precisely what is photographed.

If you impact a sealed vessel with enough force to change the shape of it, it will blow outwards before the weakest point releases the pressure inside. There absolutely no way the side walls would crush inwards from impact. Hit any shape of sealed plastic bottle and see for yourself.
 
In fact given the loads this would have been under when the ram was operating, I doubt a vacuum would generate sufficient force. I’m more inclined to say the ram has fouled on something inside and pulled it in from the inside.

The vacuum doesn't generate any force. The vacuum removes a pressure equilibrium and you would be amazed how little suction is required to do so.
 
The vacuum doesn't generate any force. The vacuum removes a pressure equilibrium and you would be amazed how little suction is required to do so.
Well, it's the difference in pressure between the outside and inside that generates a force, f=pa after all. But this appears to be a hydraulic crusher, it's going to generate massive pressures inside it presumably, so it's going to be designed to contain that sort of dp.
 
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