Yeah...that's some scarry stuff. There was a house here in Plainview that blew up from a gas leak. Didn't leave anything but splinters and a washing machine.
About three miles north of my house, there is a large natural gas relay station. We passed by it anytime we went to town. One day we noticed from afar that a large white plume was coming from the station. It sits right off the road and you have to drive within 100 yards of it when you pass. I don't know why we didn't stop and I still shiver to think what could have happened, but we went ahead and drove by as we had errands to run. The plume was issuing forth with a mighty roar, and it rose to about 50-100 feet in the air before it disapated. The roar from the leak was so intense that as we drove by it actually shook the windows in the car. After we passed, we could still see the plume of gas for about 7-8 miles.
I don't know what type of gas it was (likely not a very volatile gas or I would not be typing this post), but it was an awesome sight to behold.
--nathan
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'91 GT, Coast 347, 9.5:1 compression, full intake, Wolverine 1087 cam, exhaust, Keith Craft ported Windsor Jr. Irons (235 cfm intake, 195 cfm exhaust), AOD, PI 3500 converter, Lentech valve body, 3.73's (4.10's in the works), and Yokohama ES100's out back.
Daily Car: '04 Infiniti G35 Sedan 6MT
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