Industrial Strength Podcast

IS041 - The Gas that kills quietly

37 min · 8. juni 2026
episode IS041 - The Gas that kills quietly cover

Description

In this episode of the Industrial Strength Podcast, Randy, Jeff, and Steve take on hydrogen sulfide, a hazardous gas that responders may encounter in industrial settings, wastewater systems, agriculture, food processing, and even around sewer infrastructure. The hosts break down why hydrogen sulfide is so dangerous, how it behaves during releases, why smell is not a reliable warning sign, and how hazmat teams should think about metering, PPE, rescue, and response priorities. Hydrogen sulfide is everywhere. The episode makes clear that responders should not think of hydrogen sulfide as limited to refineries or oil and gas. It may appear in sewers, wastewater systems, agriculture, food processing, and industrial facilities. Your nose is not a meter. The hosts strongly emphasize that the rotten egg smell can disappear not because the hazard is gone, but because the gas has overwhelmed the body’s ability to smell it. Treat it as hazmat first. A downed victim in a hydrogen sulfide environment is not automatically a rescue-first scenario. The atmosphere may be immediately dangerous to life and health, and rushing in can create multiple victims. Four-gas meters are essential. Hydrogen sulfide monitoring should be a primary action, not an afterthought. The meter helps identify hydrogen sulfide, oxygen displacement, and flammable atmosphere concerns. SCBA is the default respiratory protection. The hosts repeatedly lean toward SCBA as the safest respiratory choice, especially given hydrogen sulfide’s toxicity, oxygen-displacement concerns, and potential for rapid incapacitation. PPE decisions depend on the source and mission. The crew debates bunker gear, Level A, and flash-protective suits, reinforcing that responders must consider toxicity, flammability, source material, rescue vs. mitigation, and site-specific hazards. “You cannot rely on your nose. Instrument monitoring for this kind of thing is critical.” “Hydrogen sulfide incidents must be managed as hazmat events first, rather than rescue operations.” “Always bring a four-gas downrange.” “If you see a patient down… and you try to go save them, guess what? Now you’ve got two victims.” For questions, feedback, or topic ideas, listeners can reach the team at HazmatHarder@gmail.com [HazmatHarder@gmail.com] and find the Industrial Strength Podcast through The Hazmat Guys, YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts. Call to Action: Review your department or facility’s hydrogen sulfide response plan. Check your meters, understand your PPE options, and talk through how your team would handle a downed-worker scenario before the real call comes in.

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41 episodes

episode IS041 - The Gas that kills quietly artwork

IS041 - The Gas that kills quietly

In this episode of the Industrial Strength Podcast, Randy, Jeff, and Steve take on hydrogen sulfide, a hazardous gas that responders may encounter in industrial settings, wastewater systems, agriculture, food processing, and even around sewer infrastructure. The hosts break down why hydrogen sulfide is so dangerous, how it behaves during releases, why smell is not a reliable warning sign, and how hazmat teams should think about metering, PPE, rescue, and response priorities. Hydrogen sulfide is everywhere. The episode makes clear that responders should not think of hydrogen sulfide as limited to refineries or oil and gas. It may appear in sewers, wastewater systems, agriculture, food processing, and industrial facilities. Your nose is not a meter. The hosts strongly emphasize that the rotten egg smell can disappear not because the hazard is gone, but because the gas has overwhelmed the body’s ability to smell it. Treat it as hazmat first. A downed victim in a hydrogen sulfide environment is not automatically a rescue-first scenario. The atmosphere may be immediately dangerous to life and health, and rushing in can create multiple victims. Four-gas meters are essential. Hydrogen sulfide monitoring should be a primary action, not an afterthought. The meter helps identify hydrogen sulfide, oxygen displacement, and flammable atmosphere concerns. SCBA is the default respiratory protection. The hosts repeatedly lean toward SCBA as the safest respiratory choice, especially given hydrogen sulfide’s toxicity, oxygen-displacement concerns, and potential for rapid incapacitation. PPE decisions depend on the source and mission. The crew debates bunker gear, Level A, and flash-protective suits, reinforcing that responders must consider toxicity, flammability, source material, rescue vs. mitigation, and site-specific hazards. “You cannot rely on your nose. Instrument monitoring for this kind of thing is critical.” “Hydrogen sulfide incidents must be managed as hazmat events first, rather than rescue operations.” “Always bring a four-gas downrange.” “If you see a patient down… and you try to go save them, guess what? Now you’ve got two victims.” For questions, feedback, or topic ideas, listeners can reach the team at HazmatHarder@gmail.com [HazmatHarder@gmail.com] and find the Industrial Strength Podcast through The Hazmat Guys, YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts. Call to Action: Review your department or facility’s hydrogen sulfide response plan. Check your meters, understand your PPE options, and talk through how your team would handle a downed-worker scenario before the real call comes in.

8. juni 202637 min
episode IS040 - Pyrophoric and reactive materials artwork

IS040 - Pyrophoric and reactive materials

0:30 – 1:43 | Welcome Back and Part Two Setup The hosts welcome returning guest Steve and joke about the challenge of saying the podcast name. Randy frames this as a continuation of the previous discussion on pyrophoric sanitary/materials, noting how rare and specialized this field is. 1:43 – 3:47 | Pyrophorics in Semiconductor Manufacturing Steve explains how pyrophoric and hydrogen-based gases such as silane and arsine are used in semiconductor production. The group discusses wafer etching, polishing, high-temperature baking, and the role of silane-based materials in creating coatings on computer chips. 3:47 – 6:54 | Transportation of Pyrophoric Materials The discussion shifts from the industrial site to transportation. Steve explains that these materials arrive by truck rather than rail, often in specialized trailers with venting features such as vinyl tarp-style sides. The group compares truck delivery to mixed-modal transport and railcar offloading hazards. 6:54 – 9:28 | Sketchy Containers and Handwritten Labels The group discusses an abandoned container situation involving confusing or handwritten chemical labeling, including references to trichlorosilane and dichlorosilane. Steve explains how chemistry knowledge helped guide risk assessment and disposal decisions. 9:28 – 11:07 | Industrial Familiarity vs. Outside Response The team compares how industrial responders and outside responders perceive high-hazard chemicals. Industrial teams may be more comfortable because they understand the materials, while outside responders may face uncertainty when arriving without process knowledge. 11:08 – 13:57 | Metering, Leak Detection, and Acoustic Imaging The conversation turns to detecting leaks from compressed gas systems. Steve discusses the usefulness of thermal imaging and mentions acoustic leak detection technology that can visually identify gas flow. 14:08 – 16:18 | Hydrogen Hazards and Stack Fires The group talks about hydrogen use at industrial sites, including semi-trailer delivery and stack fires. Steve explains that hydrogen may burn with a hard-to-see flame, especially during daytime, making thermal imaging critical. 16:18 – 18:57 | Green Hydrogen, Forklifts, and False CO Calls Steve describes growing use of hydrogen forklifts and on-site hydrogen generation through electrolysis. The team discusses incidents where fire departments responded to carbon monoxide detector activations that were actually related to hydrogen cross-sensitivity or hydrogen off-gassing. 19:16 – 22:07 | Meter Training and Responder Intimidation The hosts discuss how meters can intimidate responders, especially when devices have multiple modes, unclear buttons, or different behaviors across brands. Steve emphasizes that responders must understand digital readings and thresholds rather than simply waiting for alarms. 22:08 – 25:19 | Buying Better Equipment and Justifying the Cost The group talks about the challenge of getting organizations to fund better detection equipment, including Raman, FTIR, and PID devices. They discuss how shared use across departments can help justify the cost. 25:20 – 28:21 | PID Lamps, Correction Factors, and Field Usability The discussion gets into technical details around PID lamps, including 10.6 eV and 11.7 eV lamps, lamp lifespan, moisture protection, correction factors, and cheat sheets. 28:21 – 29:38 | Cold Weather, Vapor Behavior, and Equipment Limits The team discusses cold-weather response, including reduced vapor pressure, shrinking metal O-rings, gasket selection, and the importance of using manufacturer-approved parts to avoid liability. 29:39 – 32:26 | Wrap-Up and Tease for Part Three The hosts agree that the conversation deserves a third episode. They plan to let guest Steve ask more questions about the hosts’ industrial world and tease a future discussion about an unusual tote.

25. maj 202632 min
episode IS039: Ammonia artwork

IS039: Ammonia

Episode Summary Randy, Jeff, and Steve talk through the hazards and response considerations for ammonia, especially in industrial settings. They cover common uses like refrigeration, fertilizer, chemical manufacturing, wastewater treatment, and leak detection, then move into exposure symptoms, monitoring, PPE, decon, and tactical priorities. Key Topics Ammonia basics Ammonia is common in household products, but industrial concentrations are a very different hazard. The crew discusses its sharp odor, behavior as a gas, and how cold releases can form visible clouds. Industrial uses The episode highlights ammonia in refrigeration systems, fertilizer applications, chemical manufacturing, wastewater treatment, and leak testing. Health hazards Exposure can cause eye and throat irritation, coughing, breathing difficulty, skin burns, lung damage, pulmonary edema, and potentially death in severe cases. Detection and monitoring The hosts discuss odor detection, four-gas meters, ammonia-specific sensors, and their experience using RKI meters with ammonia detection capability. Response considerations The crew covers scene size-up, wind direction, evacuation, HVAC shutdown, PPE selection, flammability concerns, and manpower challenges during the first few minutes of an incident. Decon Forced-air ventilation may work for vapor contamination, while water decon may be appropriate depending on concentration and runoff control needs. Contact Questions or feedback: industrialstrength@thehazmatguys.com Hazmat harder.

11. maj 202639 min
episode IS038: Everything That’s Old Is New Again artwork

IS038: Everything That’s Old Is New Again

Overview In this episode, Randy, Jeff, and Steve dive into a rediscovered gem in the hazmat world: the Hazmat IQ system. What started as a nostalgic revisit quickly turns into a practical discussion on how this tool simplifies chemical size-up, enhances decision-making, and supports responders across all certification levels. From laminated cards to a revived mobile app, the crew explores why this “old” system still holds serious value today. Segment Breakdown & Timestamps (0:31 – 1:31) — Welcome & Episode Setup • Introduction to hosts: Randy, Jeff, and Steve • Light humor and team dynamics • Tease of a “different” and exciting topic (1:32 – 4:43) — The Return of Hazmat IQ • Randy introduces Hazmat IQ as a chemical size-up tool • Background: laminated cards → mobile app → disappearance → return • Emotional attachment to the tool and its usefulness in the field (4:43 – 7:14) — Why Hazmat IQ Works • Focus on pattern recognition over memorization • Simplified flowcharts based on: o Physical state (solid/liquid/gas) o Chemical properties (flammable, oxidizer, reactive) • Removes need for deep chemistry knowledge (7:14 – 10:15) — Tailored for All Skill Levels • App now adapts to certification levels: o Awareness o Operations o Technician • Makes it accessible for: o Municipal departments o Industrial teams o Mixed-experience crews (10:33 – 12:07) — Real-World Application • Comparing simple spills (diesel) vs. complex chemicals • Even experienced chemists benefit from structured guidance • Helps determine: o PPE o Isolation distances o Monitoring equipment (12:09 – 15:14) — Training & Skill Development • Used for: o Tabletop drills o Solo practice o Scenario-based learning • Integration with training videos (YouTube-style learning) • Builds confidence for first-arriving officers (17:24 – 18:32) — Key Concept: “Above the Line / Below the Line” • Based on vapor pressure behavior • Determines: o How chemicals travel o Exposure risk o Operational approach (19:05 – 20:48) — Simplifying Complexity • Hazmat IQ compared to a user-friendly periodic table • Emphasis on: o Chemical families o Predictable behaviors • “Keep it simple” philosophy (21:06 – 21:48) — Limitations & Training Importance • System is powerful but not foolproof • Misunderstanding inputs can lead to wrong outputs • Reinforces need for formal training (22:24 – 24:36) — Offline Capability = Big Advantage • Works without internet connection • Critical for: o Industrial facilities o Remote locations o Disaster scenarios (24:41 – 27:07) — Final Thoughts & Recommendations • Strong endorsement from hosts • Available on phones and tablets • Encouragement to explore and practice (27:57 – 29:16) — Listener Engagement & Wrap-Up • Call for feedback and discussion • Contact info shared • Tease for future guest episode Key Takeaways • Hazmat IQ simplifies complex chemistry into actionable decision-making tools • Focuses on patterns, properties, and behavior, not equations • Adaptable for all responder levels • Works offline, making it reliable in critical environments • Best used as a support tool, not a replacement for training

27. apr. 202629 min
episode IS037: Incident command system artwork

IS037: Incident command system

Episode Overview In this episode of the Hazmat HardwarePodcast, Randy, Jeff, and Steve continue their deep dive into the IncidentCommand System (ICS)—specifically focusing on three critical roles: SafetyOfficer, Accountability Officer, and Public Information Officer (PIO). Blending real-world hazmat experience withhumor and candid storytelling, the team breaks down how these roles function inhigh-risk industrial environments—and why they’re essential to keepingresponders safe, organized, and effective.   Segment Breakdown & Timestamps 0:30 – 1:22 | Introduction & ICS Recap   1:23 – 13:02 | The Safety Officer Role   13:02 – 23:16 | Accountability Officer   23:16 – 30:46 | Public Information Officer(PIO)   30:46 – End | Wrap-Up & Banter

13. apr. 202632 min