NormanS
Well-Known Member
How many people have gas in their houses?
Yes, and electricity is dangerous too. In fact, the whole of life is full of danger. We're doomed, we're all doomed, I tell ye!
How many people have gas in their houses?
How many people have gas in their houses?
Irrelevant, unless they have a basement.
So anyone with a basement shouldn't have gas?
But for me the clincher is that the baseline CO emissions from a paraffin "roarer" burner are much higher than those from a gas stove; BAS would have moved to gas if it were logistically practical (the increased volume and weight of gas containers makes it unviable). The emissions are still below the level that will set off an alarm, but the point is that you're closer to the red-line, so relatively minor glitches with the burner can increase the CO levels beyond safe limits.
How many people have gas in their houses?
Irrelevant, unless they have a basement.
So anyone with a basement shouldn't have gas?
Or gas pipes under the floor. Oh heck!
No just saying that gas in a house bears no relation to gas on a boat. Mind you more houses have been blown up by gas than have boats. I guess that's because there are more houses than boats. In any event the comparison is not relevant to the discussion.
Irrelevant, unless they have a basement.
So anyone with a basement shouldn't have gas?
No just saying that gas in a house bears no relation to gas on a boat. Mind you more houses have been blown up by gas than have boats. I guess that's because there are more houses than boats. In any event the comparison is not relevant to the discussion.
I've cooked on board for years with gas, and I enjoy cooking, so I have sometimes prepared what people may consider quite fancy meals.
I fitted a new gas twin burner hob and grill complete with flame failure device to my last boat when I bought her, and I'd already bought a new hob in preparation do do the same to my new to me boat which had a very ancient Lytham Mariner that the surveyor had condemned.
I was quite prepared to fit the required gas locker and change the hoses and piping as suggested by my surveyor ( and insisted on by my insurers ) - that was until we visited our old boat to take her off the water and tow her home, and I started to unscrew the nearly full camping gas cylinder, and the thing didn't seal ! I hastily but carefully screwed it back on, by now the smell of gas was everywhere. Thankfully there was no one else around, least of all any smokers. We pondered what to do, and in the end we unscrewed the thing and hastily but carefully abandoned ship. It took ages for the cylinder to empty, you could smell the gas a long way away, it being a typically still day in S W France. We waited, and waited, and eventually went and took the cylinder off the boat so we could continue working on de- rigging, leaving it on a table well away from anybody should anybody appear.
Eventually somebody did appear, unsurprisingly a Frenchman, and we warned him not to light up. He seemed completely unconcerned, and said all you need to do is take a screwdriver and push the ball bearing in the gas cylinder a few times and it will probably re-seal itself. I wasn't going to do that...
So, we now are the proud owners of a nice little Origo 3000, which I have perfectly successfully tried out in the kitchen for an evening meal - and we have a new twin burner gas hob for sale.
I won't go gas again. I can live without proper toast.
Do you know if the type of paraffin burners used in a Tilley/Optimus/Vapalux lamp have the same characteristics regarding CO?
If so, I would consider those a greater hazard as they are more likely to be run for longer and with less ventilation, compared to cooking (I certainly like to leave the hatch at least half open).
Not true.Natural gas rises & there is also the issue of constituent parts/relationship to air.
If you plunged a match into a basement (or bilge) full it would'nt explode.The percentage of gas/air relationship has to be just right or you do not get combustion.
I have no statistics to back this up, but based upon my reading in the yachting press it seems to me that far more people die by falling overboard, being hit by the boom, keels failing, overwhelmed by weather and several others than do by exploding gas. The risk is very low indeed by just being as careful and sensible as any long term yacht owner would be.
Phew, thanks.In a house a roof is probably dodgier.
have no statistics to back this up, but based upon my reading in the yachting press it seems to me