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- May 29, 2009
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Haha so i know im not the only one that made stupid mistakes in lab, so wat has been your dumbest one?
Not myself, but one of the grad students used 100% ethanol to dissolve the agar. She heated the gel up and it was "boiling too fast" in the microwave. I open the door and I swear I've received irreparable lung damage from the ethanol fumes. So, don't worry, because even grad students who are about to receive their PhD's screw up.making gel media but forgetting to put in the agar.....
It was my first week of lab and I was cleaning my glassware after making buffer when one of the Phd students emptied a cooler full of dry ice into the sink. I decided to play with the dry ice 🙄 . I placed a chunk of dry ice into a beaker of warm water and made fog, quite a bit of fog. I then decided to call the Phd student over to show her my master piece, she laughed and when on with her work . The the my PI came over , i was so proud of my work i showed her too.
That night i got an email from my PI saying that i need to take a lab safety class the next coming thursday.
A post-doc in a lab I worked in years ago asked me to inspect an orbital shaker device. It wasn't moving incredible smoothly and figured that I could clean it or something. Not only did I not fix it, but I completely tore it apart, totally obliterating it, and absolutely could not get it back together again. I quietly left for the day and left it on the lab bench lying in a heap.
ditto.Funny you should say that because my PI introduced me to the world of dry-ice office pranks.
ditto.
You want real fun? stick 'em in 1.5 eppendorfs and cap 'em.![]()
ditto.
You want real fun? stick 'em in 1.5 eppendorfs and cap 'em.![]()
running a gel with water instead of buffer... or once running a gel with no liquid... 😕
Definitely broke glassware, it's practically a rite of passage.
A post-doc in a lab I worked in years ago asked me to inspect an orbital shaker device. It wasn't moving incredible smoothly and figured that I could clean it or something. Not only did I not fix it, but I completely tore it apart, totally obliterating it, and absolutely could not get it back together again. I quietly left for the day and left it on the lab bench lying in a heap.
So, don't worry, because even grad students who are about to receive their PhD's screw up.
Oh god I've made so many mistakes in the lab over the years.
Anywhere from broken glassware, to dropping 1000 tips on the floor, to spilling glass beads everywhere, to exploding things in the microwave.
I think the worst was when I was boiling some protein samples that I was going to run on a gel. The water bath I used was across the lab, behind my lab bench. So I set the samples up to boil....and then completely forgot about it and went home. Of course the water evaporated, the eppendorf tubes melted and my protein samples completely fried in the water bath.
To make it worse this was near the area where I work with radioactivity. Of course when the samples melted there was smoke and it smelled bad, alerting people (thank god people were still there) to the fact that I had done this. Then the neighboring PI was (so I'm told) running around being like "are these samples radioactive?!?!?!?!?!" (thank god they weren't).
ugh. it was bad.
I also did it twice.
After the second time I learned to move the water bath onto my own bench.
I also began to keep a disposable camera at my bench to keep all of my horrible lab mistakes over the years. Someday I should be able to look back without cringing too badly.
I had another PhD candidate come in to talk to me and as she was talking she looped her hand through the safety shower pull (the triangle part) and then leaned into it....completely turning on the safety shower and getting both her and I wet. I saw her put her hand into the pull and I thought it was strange but I was sure she wouldn't pull it. I didn't realize she would try to use it to support her body weight.
So yeah, even people with soon to be awarded doctorates can make idiotic mistakes in the lab. It happens. and most of the time its funny. if not embarrassing.
Funny you should mention the water bath. I was doing a transformation which required a "heat shock" step and thus necessitated the use of a water bath for like 90 seconds or so. Of course I forgot to turn it off and got a stern talking to the next day about how the water in the bath can evaporate and the machine can catch fire and the lab can burn down. Apparently it is the #1 cause of fires in biochemistry labs? Who knew
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I messed up preparing a lipofectamine transfection reagent mixture. Instead of putting 3 uL in about 200 uL of other crud, I transfected with 200 uL of strait-up lipofectamine. **** was either $250 or $400 for 1ml, so something like $70 down the drain to melt my tissue culture into paste. PI was not amused...
After collecting field samples, realize that several of the sample bags had the same ID number on them. Going back out on a flat exposed rock outcropping in the middle of the summer gave me excellent working knowledge of what bacon feels like on a frying pan...for 3 hours...
My best: Helping a friend dispose of reacted sodium metal that resulted in a small fire in the fume hood, followed by a gratuitous explosion, sending him to the floor, and burning sodium metal into my face. PI was waay to chill about it...that scared us more than the actual KaBOOOM!
I contaminated a line of stem cells while plating during my first week, instantaneously costing the lab more money than I was worth as a research assistant.
:'(
Funny you should mention the water bath. I was doing a transformation which required a "heat shock" step and thus necessitated the use of a water bath for like 90 seconds or so. Of course I forgot to turn it off and got a stern talking to the next day about how the water in the bath can evaporate and the machine can catch fire and the lab can burn down. Apparently it is the #1 cause of fires in biochemistry labs? Who knew
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I was also autoclaving what I thought was LB Broth; so I mixed the powder with distilled water, autoclaved it, got the bottle and set it on my bench to cool.
After a couple of hours the post-doc that I work with went over to the bench and apparently moved the bottle over. Only he noticed that the "liquid" did not budge at all. I had accidentally used LB Agar powder (for making plates) instead of the Broth powder. He had a riot turning the bottle upside down and letting everyone see my LB apparently defying gravity.
And of course the PI walked in just then and started going on about wasting resources and such... Embarrassing day for sure![]()
The metal can is just for extra protection. There's padding/dessicant on the inside, along with your airtight reagent bottle. And your PI didn't know that tBuLi was pyrophoric??? Biology prof or something?