access to the underground tank. she probably saved the building. with the fire out and everyone safe, one question remains. what sparked the fire? fuel vapors are heavier than air, and they sink, and on such a cool, breezeles night, the fumes say where they fall and pile up. conditions are perfect for what happens next. the oxygen of the car got in and out of his car several times. the car the subject had hoody type clothing on, and we believe that it built up a static charge, and when he got back out of his car the last time, and reached for the nozzle to shut it off, the static charge that he built up in his body discharged, and ignited the vapors. the lesson to be learned here is next time you re at the pump on a cold, breezeless night, touch something metal before you
reserve. it works. orlando is now able to drift safely to the ground. keeping his cool under pressure turns a very bad day into a great story. orlando considers why his can pea might have opened early. a chute s deployment depends a lot on the cord. it holds the entire chute inside the container. if the closing loop is too loose, wind can get inside and pull the chute open. a pin holds it all in place. something that happened while the packer was closing the