splinetto said:Some parts of Missouri are requiring CO/Smoke Combos on every floor..
dnem said:Combos are a bad idea and should be excluded by code.
David
iwire said:I disagree, that is not a code issue that is a design issue.
iwire said:If the homeowner does not maintain the equipment that is the homeowners fault not the codes.
iwire said:To me that would make as much sense as requiring that a branch circuit has one device to protect against short circuits, another device to protect against overloads, another device to provide GFCI protection and yet another device to provide AFCI protection.
sparky_magoo said:CO is heavier than air. It floats on the floor. smoke is lighter than air, it rises to the ceiling. I was taught mount CO detectors near the floor. I find the idea of a CO/smoke combo. detector as absurd as AFCI breakers.![]()
Electron_Sam78 said:So really the safest bet would be sleep on the top level of a bunk bed with your CO detector on the floor :grin:
dnem said:Safest bet is not to have any devices in your home that operate on combustion.
But that's not going to happen with most people. . What I've chosen to do in my house is throw out my CO/smoke combo. . And I'm pitching my gas range and buying a flat top electric. . That'll limit my combustible devices to the basement [hotwater tank, furnace, dryer]. . Then in the basement I'll put in a stand alone CO detector on the ceiling and another one somewhere within 2 feet of the floor back partially behind the hotwater tank where it won't get covered or hit by something. . Plus I'll tie the CO detectors into the interconnect of the smokes.
All of which isn't required in Ohio.
But I've had the basement CO detector [the combo that I'm ripping out] save the lives of my whole family at about 2 o'clock one night/morning about 5 years ago. . It woke us up squawking in the basement and when I checked the digital display detector on the first floor it was at 150 and ticking up and up at about 10 per minute. . I don?t think any of us would have woken up the next morning. . Low level CO poisoning makes you feel like you have the flu and getting sick gives you the headsup that something?s wrong. . Hi level CO kills you before you wakeup.
David
sparky_magoo said:CO is heavier than air. It floats on the floor. smoke is lighter than air, it rises to the ceiling. I was taught mount CO detectors near the floor. I find the idea of a CO/smoke combo. detector as absurd as AFCI breakers.![]()
eprice said:Based on the information from the EPA and other sources that I have seen, the idea that carbon monoxide will sink to the floor is just a myth not supported by fact. I wonder if this common myth comes from the fact that carbon dioxide is indeed heavier than air, about 1.5 times as heavy as air according to this source: http://www.uigi.com/carbondioxide.html. It may also have something to do with the fact that propane is heavier than air with a specific gravity of about 1.52.
Pierre C Belarge said:Follow the manufacturers installation instructions, of which there are different install requirements.
