Please no insults here. I have significant personal experience with launching bottle rockets at 120psi. (And with three exploding at ~160psi about 5 feet from me, no shielding, no injuries) None have ruptured unless the pressure is allowed to go past 120psi. The failure from a 2L bottle mostly full with water will not be very violent, since there is little compressed volume to expand. Precautions are always recommended, in case you are pressurizing a flawed bottle, and get incredibly unlucky.omniscient wrote:Anyone here who would tell you that what you've described is safe to do, doesn't know their ass, from a hole in the ground. (to put it as mildly as possible).
I doubt the normal CO2 one purchases will have enough impurities in is to cause any problems... after all, it's not like you inhale all the gas out of the top of the bottle, you drink the water and whatever compounds have been formed in the reactions between the pressurized gas and the water, with concentrations according to their K value. I don't think any gas will be present in sufficient concentration (and thus a significant partial pressure) to produce a measurable amount of product. Although... there is such a thing as "beverage grade CO2," so I'd be wary of the stuff before drinking it.