Warning Gas

phil wood of Barnsley
phil wood of Barnsley Forum Participant Posts: 1
edited October 2013 in Your stories #1

Dear Reader :       Open letter
Recentley while on holiday in Pickering North Yorks after an evening out my wife and i returned to our caravan with two friends for a night cap. My friends wife said she could smell gas and my wife said she thought she had smelled somthing the day before. Me and my mate couldnt smell a thing ....hy friend then leaving sid he had a carbon monoxide detector in his caravan ...we protested "dont bother " as its raining heavy and late at night but luckily he insisted and brought one over. At three am the alarm went off on the device very loudly my wife tried to smother the noise under a duvet so not to disturb neighbours ! i opened the roof light and door then turned off the gas bottle at source.
                  I belive Simon and Fiona save our lives that night as without the alarm we would not have know thank you,
Readers .........please please if you dont have a detector fiited ......install one they are about £20 at B&Q ect
P & P Wood

Comments

  • markdg
    markdg Forum Participant Posts: 2
    edited October 2013 #2

    A CO detector will not detect natural gas, or indeed LPG, irrespective if it's butane or propane. A chemical is added to all these gases at the manufacturing stage to give them a smell for safety reasons. Carbon Monoxide ( CO ) has no smell whatsoever and
    is a product of incomplete combustion from a faulty gas appliance, usually caused by the lack of ventilation and poor maintainence. This is why it is so important that you get ALL your gas appliances thouroughly inspected and tested by a suitably qualified
    GAS SAFE registered engineer who has his Caravans and Boats ticket at least once every 12 months. It goes without saying that that you should also have a CO detector within your van and test it regularly to ensure the battery is still working. New legislation
    came into play on the 1st of october this year where by you must fit a CO detector within your home when replacing your boiler to a new model. In my opinion and experience, there are more gas safety issues within a caravan and every effort MUST be made to
    ensure safety comes first at all times.

  • royandsharont
    royandsharont Forum Participant Posts: 735
    100 Comments
    edited October 2013 #3

    That was lucky Phil.

    I agree with with markdg about the CO2. We have an CO2 alarm but also have a gas alarm which detects LPG. We met a chap in France earlier this year who had bought an older A class van and bought a gas alarm because of its age and he found it developed a
    gas leak whilst away so that probably saved his life. Regards, Roy