BILLY MAYS! NOOOOOOOO!

Something one should know about these "Oxy" products Billy hawked. From a cleaning stand point there a good product. Inexpensive and affectvie. Fram a risk standpoint I wouldn't keep those products in my house. These products are strong oxidizers and are not only reactive but if you have a house fire these chemicals would act like accelerants feeding the blase. I would store them outside the home and away from open flames.
 
Like this guy?



Billy was a great American and I for one will miss him. I wonder what Anthony Sullivan is going to do with their hit show on Discovery, "Pitchmen"?

Now they think he may have been killed due to being hit on his head during a bumpy plane landing. The same thing Natasha Richardson died from.
 
LOL,
Good one Ib1. I said no more rep points from me so you neg repped me :clink:

Bak at ya tonight if you want it that way.
 
Something one should know about these "Oxy" products Billy hawked. From a cleaning stand point there a good product. Inexpensive and affectvie. Fram a risk standpoint I wouldn't keep those products in my house. These products are strong oxidizers and are not only reactive but if you have a house fire these chemicals would act like accelerants feeding the blase. I would store them outside the home and away from open flames.


*sigh* If you use the product in the manner it is instructed, and store it in the manner instructed, there is no danger or risk to the consumer. For oxidizers to become dangerous, something has to facilitate the chemical reaction, it doesn't spontaneously happen. While it is an oxidizer, and it can be 'explosive' if mixed with the right flammable fuel, it is no more dangerous in a fire than anything else found in the home.... booze...grease...bullets...other laundry powders... If a house fire is serious enough for the oxidizer to become an 'accelerator' from within its container, the fire is most likely very severe, and the oxidizer is irrelevant.
 
*sigh* If you use the product in the manner it is instructed, and store it in the manner instructed, there is no danger or risk to the consumer. For oxidizers to become dangerous, something has to facilitate the chemical reaction, it doesn't spontaneously happen. While it is an oxidizer, and it can be 'explosive' if mixed with the right flammable fuel, it is no more dangerous in a fire than anything else found in the home.... booze...grease...bullets...other laundry powders... If a house fire is serious enough for the oxidizer to become an 'accelerator' from within its container, the fire is most likely very severe, and the oxidizer is irrelevant.

I'd still store it outside in the shed with the paint and fertilizers and bug killers.
 
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