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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Small leaking drum being put into a larger salvage drum

A Salvage Drum[1] is an outer container used for shipping a leaking, damaged or non-compliant drum containing hazardous materials.[2]

Several designs are available.[3][4][5]

Originally designed to be greater than, or equal to, the construction and performance specifics of an inner container, the Performance Oriented Packaging Standards (POPS) of the US Department of Transportation requirement was that the Salvage Drum be at least a 'Z' (Packing Group III) solids container. Convinced that this was not an acceptable test for a Salvage Drum, on January 1, 1998, the 'T' Salvage Drum (1A2T)[6] became the UN recommended salvage packaging for international shipments. The US-DOT, per 49 CFR 173.3, also recognizes the 'T' Salvage Drum for shipments within the US. Unlike the original 49 CFR Salvage Drum requirement, the 'T' Salvage Drum is most commonly an 85-US-gallon (320 L) steel drum that, meets UN Model Regulations test requirement 6.1.5.1.11, which specifies that when filled with water, the drum can qualify for Packing Group II and be dropped 1.2 metres (3.9 ft) on its most critical orientation, and not leak. In addition, the drum must successfully pass a 30 kilopascals (4.4 psi) Leakproofness Test. Both tests are very severe for an open-head steel container. This testing illustrates the extreme capabilities of the 'T' Salvage Drum when used for the safe recovery of hazardous materials in transportation.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Bulging Drums - What Every Responder Should Know 1998 Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL)
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Transcription

See also

References

  1. ^ Salvage Drum Definition Clarified by DOT
  2. ^ UN 85 Gallon CSOH Salvage Drum
  3. ^ US 4708258, Shaw, Mark D.; Heyman, J. Tad & Bierce, Laurence M., "Salvage drum", published 1987-11-24, assigned to Bondico Inc. 
  4. ^ US 4709833, Granberg, William J.; Wagner, Richard A. & Hundt, Gary W., "Rotationally molded salvage drum and recessed lid", published 1987-12-01, assigned to Essex Environmental Industries Inc. 
  5. ^ US 5358133, Gillispie, John G. & Mitchell, Donald J., "Over-pack container for an industrial drum", published 1994-10-25, assigned to Eagle Manufacturing Co. 
  6. ^ What Is A T-Rated Salvage Drum
  • Yam, K. L., "Encyclopedia of Packaging Technology", John Wiley & Sons, 2009, ISBN 978-0-470-08704-6
  • Performance tests of selected plastic drums, National Research Council Canada, February 2005. TP 14396E, Transport Canada
  • Drop tests of selected steel drums, InNOVAcorp, 2003. TP 14093E, Transport Canada
This page was last edited on 5 June 2023, at 15:55
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