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haha. that is both quite sad and hilarious.OctoDoc said:When I was in chemistry graduate school, I averaged a little over one "big" accident per year. The worst one involved a vacuum distillation of a compound I made, and it exploded on me. If I didn't suspect it was about to pop and so took a big step back and to the side, I would be dead. There were chunks of the hot plate on the other side of the lab. I got to use the lab's safety shower, and have a small divot in my palm from flying glass. And the dark discoloration from chemical burns took several years to fade from my arm and neck.
I was so spooked that I then traded work with other students. I would do pretty much anything (reaction, purification, or lab procedure) in exchange for someone else vacuum distilling a compound for me. It took me about three years to get over it enough to again do them myself. I still am spooked about the procedure.
Umm...aren't those supposed to be chained to the wall. 🙄PhillyMD2006 said:haha. that is both quite sad and hilarious.
in addition to this little autoclave incident, i nearly tipped over a CO2 tank, which needless to say, had the top popped off, would have been like launching a small missile.
top said:Good lord...how did you break the centrifuge? those things cost like 10-25k per...
I thought it was bad when a kid near my lab took out an entire rack of those giant pipettes that you use to do like industrial titrations...each one was like $500, and he broke about 10 of em.
Thundrstorm said:Fortunately, I've never broken any expensive equipment, but I do idiotic things all of the time. Most recently, I dropped an experiment just as I was finishing it, after working on it over the course of 3 days. 🙄
Not when you are attempting to move them.Bluntman said:Umm...aren't those supposed to be chained to the wall. 🙄
Ohh I see. The protocol I was taught (and that is ingrained in my mind since we were working with compressed liquid Cl2 cylinders around our government clients) is that it's supposed to be chained to the wall, or you're supposed to have the protective cap in place over the regulator before any sort of transport/movement.PhillyMD2006 said:Not when you are attempting to move them.
Bluntman said:Ohh I see. The protocol I was taught (and that is ingrained in my mind since we were working with compressed liquid Cl2 cylinders around our government clients) is that it's supposed to be chained to the wall, or you're supposed to have the protective cap in place over the regulator before an sort of transport/movement.
I've always wanted to see one fly tho...heard they can go through walls!
MedicineNutt said:worst thing that happened to me in a lab was an explosion of a test tube!! no clue what the cause was...i just let the bunsen burner go and placed the test tube over wire guaze. Then, "BOOM EXPLOSION!"...teacher was kinda upset, but definitely not at me because he said the dude who used it before me forgot to rinse of the remaining chemical contents 🙂
maybe in another yr or so i'll have somethin better to share! 😎
talk about seeing a huge flame. Not to mention giving yourself a mini heart attack. It was a good thing that there was only ~10mL at the time. Now before I put anything on the hot plate, I take a whiff of the solvent... MeOH smells like nothing to me while, Ether has this sweet earthy smell... 
adiddas125 said:Ether has this sweet earthy smell...![]()

Hassler said:...I don't think I've ever broken something worth more than $100 😛
LJDHC05 said:I broke a $300k confocal microscope. Ok, so it wasn't my fault, but one of the shutter actuators broke while I was using it. All I smelled was burning and fear. Thank Leica for extended warranties.
About 4 weeks before that, a new co-worker was using it when one of the lasers went down. Everyone gave her crap for the 6 weeks that the laser was being refurbished, even my PI.
Hassler said:OMG....I'm starting to worry about the future of medicine in America![]()
Actually, I also mess up a lot of experiments, but I don't think I've ever broken something worth more than $100 😛
OctoDoc said:It could just have been water in the test tube, or that the glass was not Pyrex and had thermal stresses inside it (Pyrex has a near-zero coefficient of thermal expansion, and so doesn't suffer thermal stresses to any significant degree). In either case, rapid heating can cause the tube to "explode." That's why they say to never heat empty glassware.
Unless you saw a fireball, then it's definitely chemicals.

Bluntman said:Damn, this thread certainly makes me glad that I've settled into the computational side of biology and engineering! 😀
StevenRF said:I accidently dropped a small wrench into my UHV chamber when I was changing out an ion gauge. Anyway, it fell to the bottom, through the poppet valve, and into my ion pump. This required: a small engine crane to lift off half the machine, a dismantling of the pump, and a full cleaning to remove all the oil and greese that got put intside. All the metal seals required copper gaskets that had to be replaced from the dismantling. A month was waisted, thousands of dollars in gaskets spent, and there were leakage problems until my professor moved his lab accross country.
In the words of Borat: "HIGH FIVE!"![]()
PhillyMD2006 said:I think I might have broken the autoclave. Numerous people have attempted to turn it off, but there is steam spewing from it and the entire floor is a cool 85 degrees. Oops. Good thing I'm going to med school.

TinyFish said:In Undergrad:
- Dropped 2 vials of vent polymerase down an elevator shaft (don't ask).
- Went to lab drunk at 3 am one night (embryo staging) and spilled thousands of worm larvae all over the counter.
Now:
- Mixed mice up and had to secretly genotype them by "mini-southern" to figure out which ones were which.
- Accidentally released a ton of autoclave steam INTO THE MEDICAL COLLEGE LIBRARY.
- Almost tipped over a whole Thoren unit. A whole Thoren unit that held all the breeding cages for all the investigators in the lab.
- Out of curiosity, almost pressed button on tissue culture incubator. Turned out the button is used to sterilize the entire inside of the incubator. Oops.
- "Um, oops." pretty much defines my whole research experience. 😛
TinyFish said:In Undergrad:
- Dropped 2 vials of vent polymerase down an elevator shaft (don't ask).
- Went to lab drunk at 3 am one night (embryo staging) and spilled thousands of worm larvae all over the counter.
Now:
- Mixed mice up and had to secretly genotype them by "mini-southern" to figure out which ones were which.
- Accidentally released a ton of autoclave steam INTO THE MEDICAL COLLEGE LIBRARY.
- Almost tipped over a whole Thoren unit. A whole Thoren unit that held all the breeding cages for all the investigators in the lab.
- Out of curiosity, almost pressed button on tissue culture incubator. Turned out the button is used to sterilize the entire inside of the incubator. Oops.
- "Um, oops." pretty much defines my whole research experience. 😛
funshine said:I'll take the leap into shame and say it:
I've fabricated data, results, everything....
to write my thesis for graduation.
I think my postdoc and PI knew. I bet the profs who evaluated my oral defense knew too...
but it was OK, because the experiments were near impossible, my thesis research was for "practice," not publication....and I was going to med school. Ironic.
Elastase said:Everyones done some kind of dumb sh*et while working in the lab. By far the worse is when your working with animal models, and something goes wrong. Not cool 👎
Really? You must have been clenching them pretty hard. I have worked with mice for quite some time delivering doses through all kinds of methods and yet to kill one in my hands. Sedation and surgical procedures are a whole different story though.hildaluc said:AHHH - animals are the worst!!!!! I worked in a lab using mice and rats where we had to hold the mice flipped over on their back with their head immobilized to deliver their doses. Sometimes they would COMPLETELY freak out and DIE!!! In your hands! Like have a heart attack or panic attack or something - can you imagine killing an animal with your hands??!?! Holy "Of Mice and Men" gone bad...
PhillyMD2006 said:tsk, tsk, funshine. you better hope that someone doesn't try to repeat your results.