What are we breathing in?

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fossyant

Ride It Like You Stole It!
Location
South Manchester
Worse in the car though !
 

jimboalee

New Member
Location
Solihull
User1314 said:
Breathing in everything. Fumes from buses, coaches, trucks, cars, mopeds, motorbikes.

Not to mention cigarette smoke from open windows of cars.

London roads seem very dusty at the moment as well. In the dry weather hugh plumes of Vesuvius clouds, billowing white and black, envelope me as the vehicles thunder over them.

Poetry is not dead.


Another piece of misinformation.

Although PM5 and PM10 particulates are inhaled, the body has a mechanism for expelling them.

The exhaust emission that is often not reported, as it might frighten some poor blighter to death, is NOx. NOx are the 'oxides of Nitrogen' molecules such as NO and NO2, Nitric oxide and Nitrogen Dioxide.

http://www.vcacarfueldata.org.uk/searchheadings_help.asp

When NO2 combines with the humidity in your lungs, it forms acid rain. Unfortunately, your body doesn't expel it and it burns its way through the alvioli and drives the nervous system barmy.

The fatal dose is 50 parts per million.

Quote:
14 Nitric oxide is a severe eye, skin and mucous membrane irritant. Nitrogen dioxide is a highly toxic, irritating gas. There has been some reports of exposure to high levels of nitrogen dioxide (as generated by oxy-fuel gas cutting in confined spaces) resulting in severe ill health and even death. Initial exposure to high concentrations of the gas can
however result in only mild irritation followed by a symptom free period of several hours. However, this can develop into a build up of fluid on the lungs which in severe cases can sometimes be fatal. Both nitrogen dioxide and nitric oxide have been shown to have mutagenic potential, which raises possible concerns for lung cancer.



Paper filters do not filter NO and NO2.
 

jimboalee

New Member
Location
Solihull
No need to worry folks.

I've been attending drag race meetings for thirty years and have gone home with many a 'Nitro hangover'.

I worked for many years in a Motor car exhaust gas analysis laboratory dealing with bottles of 50 and 100 ppm Nitric Oxide.

Thanks to the cycling, I have a higher than average lung efficiency, even at the age of fifty.
 

Bigtwin

New Member
Just say NO2NO2.

I might copyright that....
 

garrilla

Senior Member
Location
Liverpool
Aren't all these patrticulates inside vechiles anyway? I'm hoping that the effect of cycling will be greater than any additional exposure, and even if not cycling is so much more enjoyable than travelling in a vehicle.

The only benefit of vehicles for me is the distance/time ratio.
 
OP
OP
Jake

Jake

New Member
yuck. Although its only after i've been on the tube that when i blow my nose, its black with soot or something
 

HJ

Cycling in Scotland
Location
Auld Reekie
Jake said:

The samples were collected at 30cm above ground level, where as most monitoring is carried out at about 3m above ground level (to avoid vandalism, or to reduce the measurements so the local authorities don't have to go anything about it, if you want to cynical) and found that concentrations are higher, which is why they found it had more of an impact on children. It also explains why you get higher concentrations in cars as that is about the hight of their air intakes. So for most cyclist it is not a problem, unless you ride a bent... :becool:
 

jimboalee

New Member
Location
Solihull
Jake said:
yuck. Although its only after i've been on the tube that when i blow my nose, its black with soot or something

Your nasal hairs are working fine. :becool:

As for being "crackers", I've been sniffing Nitrous Oxide for years.

"Get Fogged"....:becool:
 
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