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Joseph Meehan
 
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chemqueries wrote:
Joseph Meehan wrote:
I have heard this one both ways. While I would think that most
sources
of CO will be be heat producing sources and as such the warm air
would force the CO to rise quickly. CO is lighter than air and will
tend to

rise.
I have had one personal encounter with CO. In that case the CO

concentrations were decently greater at five feet than at four feet
and greater at four feet than one foot. We had a number of people.
Many sleeping on the floor, some sitting upright, some standing.
Those standing where first to be effected and suffered the most
during the next few days. Those sitting also experienced problems,
but not as severe. The first couple who were sitting stood up and
were quickly effected. The others seeing that did not stand up but
got to their hands and knees and were less effected and were able to
help the others and alert those sleeping. In the end there were no
lasting injuries. I have mine mounted about five foot up just
outside the bed room area on the second floor and another mounted at
outlet height on the first

floor.
BTW the one upstairs is of a new design and can record and

display
levels that are too low to set off the alarm, but may be a good early


warning. Joseph Meehan


Hi. Thanks for your help. After looking at a number of different CO
detector models, it appears as if the differences in price amoung them
tend to reflect how sensitive the detectors are at detecting lower
parts-per-million levels.

I understand that some posters here think I'm merely responding to
advertising, but this past winter alone, I've heard of several
instances of local residents dying when animals took up residence in
their chimneys, which prevented CO from escaping. I need to put a
wildlife cover on the chimney, but I've been told the chimney needs to
be repaired first. Drilling into it now will probably cause it to
crumble. A few years ago, the co-worker of a friend of mine died from
CO poisoning while flying in his airplane. These things happen. While
they may happen with much lower frequency than other accidents, like
automobile accidents, I would rather be safe than sorry.


The CO danger is real. The most serious can kill and even the cheap
detectors can keep you from being killed.

--
Joseph Meehan

26 + 6 = 1 It's Irish Math