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carbon monoxide alarm going off!


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2 minutes ago, Sviatoslav Tulin said:

CO alarm will signall if batteries is low.

 

 

Along the same line as this:-

 

If the alarm is going off, remove it from the wall/ceiling and take it outside. If it continues to go off it is a faulty  carbon monoxide alarm.

 

But as mentioned before get someone in and get it checked. Better to be safe....

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26 minutes ago, eggsarascal said:

Can’t help with the initial question but, isn’t CO2 heavier than oxygen. I thought that CO2 monitors should be mounted at head height, not on ceilings.

It is a CO monitor for combustion devices because CO, carbon monoxide, is very poisonous as it combines better with blood than oxygen

 

CO molecule is about 28 gram per mole and air is mostly nitrogen 28 and oxygen 32 so all roughly the same, as you say CO2 at 44 is heavier.

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On 05/03/2023 at 19:16, Roosaaliiee said:

Thanks. On days like today (very low wind) it's practically impossible to keep a flame going, unless I'm on it all the time. And even then....

I would say there is something fundamentally wrong then, to burn wood cleanly you must have a good flame and a good draught,

On 05/03/2023 at 19:16, Roosaaliiee said:


Would you say to never keep the fire slumbering? I tend to do this overnight to keep some heat in the living room, or on days that it's not too cold, because otherwise it gets way too hot in the room.

Yes never let it slumber as slumbering just burns char, the heat that this gives off pyrolyses the remaining wood and the offgas from this rises into the chimney unburned where it cools off and deposits soot and tars in the chimney which eventually block it, but it usually catches fire in the chimney with often damaging results.

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