Saila wrote: » is this the one about the carbon monoxide?
dubtom wrote: » This is shocking, how something so simple as a crisp packet could kill those poor people. I'm constantly telling my Wife,who is a compulsive fire messer,to stay away from it.
It has been learned that a large plastic wrapper from a crisp multi-pack caused a blockage and sent the deadly fumes into the living room where the family was watching television.
Nodin wrote: » Bit more than an empty pack of crisps....
Saila wrote: » is this the one about the carbon monoxide? edit: my sympathy left when I saw it was the huge bag the 10+ packets of crisps come in. what numpty puts one of those on a fire asking for it :rolleyes:
dubtom wrote: » What difference does it make if the wrapper was big or small,3 people died as a result of it FFS.
ItsAWindUp wrote: » Charming
Saila wrote: » doesnt change the fact he was asking for it though
msg11 wrote: » How did it block it ? Would it not have melted in the fire, I don't really understand to be honest?
44leto wrote: » All smoke alarms should be routinely fitted with carbon monoxide detectors. It would not be that expensive to impose this extra standard on the manufactures, besides people would be willing to pay the extra cost.
Saila wrote: » one of them is just a dumb thing to do, the other wins a darwin award with 2 other defenceless child victims
The incomplete combustion of organic fossil fuels such as oil, gas or coal is a common environmental source of CO and is responsible for many cases of non-fatal unintentional CO poisoning. In normal conditions the combustion process (the addition of oxygen) will result in carbon in the fossil fuel, combining with oxygen, in the air, to produce Carbon Dioxide (CO2), the same substance we exhale when we breathe. However, if there is a lack of air for the combustion process or the heating appliance is faulty, Carbon Monoxide can be produced.
jcf wrote: » How the hell did this manage to block the fumes and redirect them to the living room ?? surely it would shrivel up and burn ? or was it the fumes from the plastic itself that killed them ?
Saila wrote: » dubtom wrote: » What difference does it make if the wrapper was big or small,3 people died as a result of it FFS. one of them is just a dumb thing to do, the other wins a darwin award with 2 other defenceless child victims
Plazaman wrote: » What am I missing here. Nowhere in the article does it say Mr Wallwork put the package into the fire. Regardless of if he did or not, 3 people have died and so a keyboard warrior ups and decides they deserved it ???
Saila wrote: » Plazaman wrote: » What am I missing here. Nowhere in the article does it say Mr Wallwork put the package into the fire. Regardless of if he did or not, 3 people have died and so a keyboard warrior ups and decides they deserved it ??? eh no, I said or at least meant if a huge crisp packet gets put on a fire it is a dumb thing to do. period. if a child does it there are supervision issues. we will never know, all we can take from what has happened is it was a tragic accident and Im sorry to hear it like most. the facts according to the article are this big crisp packet was put on after it was on its way out [this is what embers are] and blocked the chimney causing the build up of carbon monoxide gas which caused their suffocation and death. RIP either way.