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Yep, your home heater, fireplace, etc can kill ya. My home bud was napping with his fireplace burning when his home CO detector went off - his only chance of waking up. His old store detector also went off one day. Even all electric homes need them, and they need to be replaced every few years. See manufacture spec.You don't need any water to die from CO poisoning. Looks like he was using a gas engine driven compressor
I test every tank, even from the best sources as it's a good habit. CO is much more dangerous as depth. Most cases are probly shrugged off as traveler's flu, most CO deaths are probly written off as drownings - no tests done in most countries as that's bad for tourism, and DAN admits to not knowing how bad it is. I create enough of my own risks; I want my air better than Trust Me! Pocket CO - Miniature Carbon Monoxide Detector and DosimeterDandy Don once bubbled about using a carbon monoxide tester on any mix you breathe.
Words to the wise. Get one and use it. The life you save may well be your own or the life of someone you care about.
Nope, what killed him was not having a qualified tender.I have a CO tester (the one Don recommended) and it works great, but don't beleive it would help with a hookah rig, since what you're breathing depends on which way the wind is blowing.
Terry
I don't guess we know exactly who is responsible for the equipment? I hope it is a company is very good liability insurance, and that the widow has a mad dog attorney....prohibiting this kind of behaviour.
While atypical of commercial diving operations, the retrieval of golf balls from a commercial golf facility by contract constitutes a commercial diving operation, thus falls under the U.S. Federal regulations & standards governing commercial diving operations.
This sad event underscores the primary reason these regs. were created - to prevent the injury &/or death of individuals unprepared to participate in commercial diving applications.
Regards,
DSD