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JohnUK

JohnUK

Student
Feb 15, 2019
147
Can't decide whether to ctb either jumping or using co .

I live near the south coast of England in a county called Sussex and the nearest place to jump is a place called beachy head cliffs as I've read.

The other one is using the co method either in a secluded area or my bathroom.

I know both have some risks but it's a risk worth taking
 
Jacquelyn

Jacquelyn

hellworld_kickflip888
Feb 23, 2019
107
If you have the time to do CO correctly (preferably with sulfuric acid and formic acid) then I highly suggest it. Charcoal seems iffy. The data from the PPH suggests 1.5kg of charcoal in a 20ft shipping container only gave off deadly levels of CO for 15 minutes, and was barely at the deadly level most of the time. For 15 minutes during test, the CO levels rose from 1% to 1.2% (the peak level during the entire test) and then back down below 1%. You need at least 1% to kill you. I'm not sure if this problem can be fixed by using more charcoal or not. If so, it's an easy fix and seems like a reliable method cause you could just use a ton of charcoal and not worry about CO levels being too low.
 
Last edited:
V

vfghjkjhilkj

Member
Nov 4, 2018
79
If you have the time to do CO correctly (preferably with sulfuric acid and formic acid) then I highly suggest it. Charcoal seems iffy. The data from the PPH suggests 1.5kg of charcoal in a 20ft shipping container

Sulfuric acid and formic acid is highly unpleasant and painful . It is corrosive to the lungs when you breathe it in. Terrible advice.

Charcoal - you need to use wayyy more than 1.5kg. Even for a tiny room.

1% is 10,000ppm which kills in 1 to 3 minutes. Not sure what you're referring to.
 
Jacquelyn

Jacquelyn

hellworld_kickflip888
Feb 23, 2019
107
Sulfuric acid and formic acid is highly unpleasant and painful . It is corrosive to the lungs when you breathe it in. Terrible advice.

Charcoal - you need to use wayyy more than 1.5kg. Even for a tiny room.

1% is 10,000ppm which kills in 1 to 3 minutes. Not sure what you're referring to.
If the sulfuric acid and formic acid is done correctly, I'm pretty sure it shouldn't be painful. Some COGen devices that use sulfuric acid and formic acid send the gas right into your nostrils with a tube. I doubt they'd include a method like that if you were inhaling fumes that burned your lungs.

"Charcoal - you need to use wayyy more than 1.5kg. Even for a tiny room." So are you saying higher CO levels can be achieved with more charcoal? Here's the data I have:
https://i.imgur.com/uLFO3Jx.png
 
V

vfghjkjhilkj

Member
Nov 4, 2018
79
If the sulfuric acid and formic acid is done correctly, I'm pretty sure it shouldn't be painful. Some COGen devices that use sulfuric acid and formic acid send the gas right into your nostrils with a tube. I doubt they'd include a method like that if you were inhaling fumes that burned your lungs.

"Charcoal - you need to use wayyy more than 1.5kg. Even for a tiny room." So are you saying higher CO levels can be achieved with more charcoal? Here's the data I have:
https://i.imgur.com/uLFO3Jx.png

Trust me, sulfuric acid is what some people chuck over other people to melt their faces. It even says on the packaging, corossive to the lungs if breathed in, corrosive to the skin if touched. You should really make sure you know what it is before you recommend it.

Yes, of course, more charcoal equals more Carbon Monoxide. It is common sense really.
 
Jacquelyn

Jacquelyn

hellworld_kickflip888
Feb 23, 2019
107
Trust me, sulfuric acid is what some people chuck over other people to melt their faces. It even says on the packaging, corossive to the lungs if breathed in, corrosive to the skin if touched. You should really make sure you know what it is before you recommend it.

Yes, of course, more charcoal equals more Carbon Monoxide. It is common sense really.
Yes, I know exactly what sulfuric acid does. I've accidentally poured it on my hand before. I just figured a book about peaceful suicide methods wouldn't include something if they knew it was extremely painful. It says "traces" of formic acid and sulfuric acid are found in the CO released. It's not like you're going to directly be inhaling fumes just from the sulfuric acid.
Maybe it hurts? Maybe it doesn't. I'd imagine the PPH would've mentioned if it did, but let's be honest, this is clearly not a common method with anecdotal reports.
 

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