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Similarly, I ran across another article that describes a number of generator-related deaths/injuries in Florida recently. Unlike the recently reported deaths of 5 people in Beaumont, Texas, where a generator was run in the apartment, this article describes two separate incidents where the generators were actually sitting outside the homes and yet the CO made its way back into the homes. In one case, authorities theorize that a breeze blew the generator exhaust through an open sliding glass door. In the other case, the generator was inadvertently turned towards the home during late night refueling, and the CO made its way under a mobile home and probably seeped up through the floor.

Seeped UP through the floor... <img src="/images/graemlins/confused.gif" alt="" /> <img src="/images/graemlins/shocked.gif" alt="" /> W.T.F.
CO is HEAVER than air... That is one of the things that makes it so dangerous in a fire, when people are crawling to get out of the smoke! And, also because of that, it tends to pool in low areas...
That must have been SOME FEAKE occurance, for the CO to go UP into a mobile home!!!

One thing about stoves... Some of them are tested withOUT pots on them... When you put a pot on some of them, the CO production SKYROCKETS, sometimes as much(or more) than 4 times!!!