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Ed Kennell

Detectors Save Lives

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Ed Kennell

Sorry for the long post, but this story needs to be told.

 

My oldest Grandson Reed has a fellowship granted for his Astro Physics PHD at Lehigh University.  He has been there for 2 years and has 2-3 years left.

Last year he got tired of paying the college town land lords rent and bought one of the row houses to house himself and a couple room mates.

His Dad Mike operates a HVAC/ Plumbing business so he installed a new gas furnace and a new Mini Split air/heat pump System.   The existing gas hot water heater was only 2 years old and tested good so it was not replaced.   Mike also installed smoke and carbon monoxide detectors as required for a rental property.

 

About two weeks ago a CO detector tripped.  Reed reset it and all was OK, but Mike sent him a second CO detector as a back up.

Friday when Reed came home the CO detectors were sounding and when reset they kept tripping.  He called his dad and Mike told him to disconnect the main breaker, open the doors, go out and wait in his car till he got there. Mike called the local fire company and left for the 2 hour trip to Bethlehem.  He suspected the gas hot water heater that he did not replace could be the problem.

 

When Mike got there, the fire company had allready checked Reeds house and appliances and could not find the source of the CO.

They went to the attached row house and  found  the house was filled with CO from a faulty furnace and the family of five were all sick with flu like symptoms.

Thankfully the loose stone basement foundation wall  allowed the CO to leak into Reeds basement and trip the alarms  and thankfully Reed did not come home for the weekend and was there to hear the alarms or the outcome would have been much different.   Per the fire company, the family would not have survived the night.

Sometimes we get lucky.   Don't rely on luck...install smoke and CO detectors for everyone you care about.

     

 

 

 

 

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SylvanLakeWH

Wow...

 

All involved were very fortunate.

 

Past work life I was in many many rentals and it was routine to see smoke and co detectors disabled by tenants who got tired of the "chirps" and removed batteries instead of installing new ones... :(

 

No excuse around here - many fire departments will provide them and install them free of charge.

 

I just replaced three new co detectors with digital displays near our three prime co sources. 

 

Edited by SylvanLakeWH
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ri702bill

Code here requires CO detectors on all floors, including basement. Smoke alarms outside each bedroom & kitchen. I like the 10 year LI style - can't steal the 9V battery for some kid's toy...

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Handy Don

We are also conscientious about these and we replace them every few years, just because. Had the gas company put in a gas detector as well.

The most recent version of the combined smoke/CO alarm outside the bedrooms upstairs has a voice synthesizer as well as a beeper. Pretty cool that it announces “Battery Low -- Replace Battery Now” 😁

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