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Is it normal to smell natural gas near water heater?
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Tekkie®
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Is it normal to smell natural gas near water heater?
micky posted for all of us...
On Wed, 12 Nov 2014 20:36:54 -0500,
wrote:
Getting more common - Co detectors are now MANDATORY in any living
space in Ontario, joining smoke detectors.
Years ago my brother gave me a CO detector for my birthday. He always
finds good things to buy, that I don't even realize would be good**
I don't remember how the problem started. but the loud CO alarm woke me
up one night. I opened the window and turned off the oil furnace. It
was a cold night, and after a while I was torn whether to shut the
window again, so I could go to sleep. But I didn't want the big sleep.
The alarm wasn't alarming, but I think I had a slight headache and
didn't want to take chances. But it was getting cold quickly. After 20,
25 minutes I shut the window and went back to sleep.
Next day called the furnace guy. He took off the 6" stove pipe leading
to the chimney. A two-inch doughnut made of nothing but soot!!!.
Leaving only 2 inches in the middle for the exhaust. That's 1/4 the
intended cross-section.
BTW, there's a story running around that oil furnaces can't make CO.
NOT true.
**He also gave me an electronic stud finder. My brother doesn't do home
repairs. I wonder how he even thought of that. My reaction was, I'll
never use it, but I used it over and over and over agains.
Many Co detectors are combination natural gas detectors. $63 is about
the average cost. Likely more like $40 yankee bucks.
Wow. The difference has grown. Last I noticed, I think 93c US was a
You could have called the fire dept (I responded to many of these calls). If
you had symptoms (which you seem to allude to) you would have gotten EMS.
--
Tekkie
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