Cold start = carbon monoxide = calling the fire department

Kinja'd!!! by "Textured Soy Protein" (texturedsoyprotein)
Published 12/28/2017 at 11:26

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STARS: 1


Kinja'd!!!

My wife had a doctor’s appointment yesterday morning. Tuesday night, she asked me to put her car in our 1-car garage so it would be warm(er) for her. It had been outside in sub-zero/single-digit temps over the holiday weekend and she wanted it to defrost in the garage.

Every once in a while, our landlord will decide they want to do some random upgrade/maintenance on our townhouse, which they typically let us know about by leaving us a note maybe a few days in advance. A couple months ago, they told us they were installing new locks, and when they did, they also installed carbon monoxide detectors in the basement (which is the garage and utility/laundry room) and first floor, in addition to the one that was already on the second floor.

On Tuesday night, after my wife asked me to swap our cars around, I parked my car outside, then, because it was butt-ass cold, I cold started her car, briefly attempted to use the wipers to clear the couple inches of snow that had piled on it, but gave up on that idea when the wipers refused to budge in the frozen-solid snow, and quickly backed her car into the garage using a combination of the side mirrors and backup camera. I shut off the car and closed the garage ASAP, and noticed the smell of exhaust fumes. I figured, ehh no big deal, I cold started the car and the catalytic converter didn’t have a chance to warm up so it’d smell a little.

Then we settled in to eat leftover Chinese food from Jewish Christmas the night before, and watch It’s A Wonderful Life, which we watch every year on Christmas but didn’t get to do until the 26th because of our hectic Christmas weekend .

Kinja'd!!!

After about an hour, the carbon monoxide detector in the basement started beeping. I tried to reset it by holding the button, and it shut off for a moment, but started beeping again. I tried to figure out how the hell to take the thing apart and remove the battery, but of course the landlord didn’t leave any instructions with it, so I decided rather than google the instructions, or try to destroy it, the responsible course of action was to call the fire department.

The dispatcher followed her script of what to say on a carbon monoxide call, which included going outside and leaving the front door open. I was like, “uhh we have 3 cats and we’re not leaving the front door open.” We do have a sliding glass door to our deck, and I could’ve left that open with the screen door closed, except that thought didn’t occur to me while my wife was frantically saying she wasn’t going out in the freezing-ass cold weather, while I was also trying to listen to the dispatcher.

Since the fire station is literally half a mile from my house, a fire truck arrived extremely quickly. I met them outside, told my wife they were coming in, and she encouraged the cats to go upstairs, and closed the bedroom doors to keep them from coming down.

4 firefighters came inside with their full gear including oxygen tanks and handheld carbon monoxide detectors.

Kinja'd!!!

I noticed the detectors were doing a lot of beeping and their screens were flashing red so there was in fact a decent amount of carbon monoxide in the house. I told them about how I had put the car in the garage and then closed it right away, so their plan was to confirm the car was the source of the CO by opening up a bunch of windows and doors, which would hopefully lower the levels on their meters, then once the levels approached zero, turn the furnace on to check that it wasn’t the source of the carbon monoxide.

They had us open the garage door, the patio door (with the screen closed), an upstairs window, and after I went to the garage to retrieve our handy cat sequestration baby gate and put it at the top of the stairs, they even opened the front door too. There was a bunch of waiting around and walking up and down stairs with handheld carbon monoxide detectors, and the head firefighter guy noticed the screensaver on the TV showing that we were watching It’s A Wonderful Life, and that he loves that movie. Eventually, after the temp on the thermostat got down to 57 goddamn degrees, they said we could close the windows and turn on the heat.

After all that, the carbon monoxide levels didn’t come back up with the heat on, so they concluded the car was indeed the source of the carbon monoxide, radioed in the all-clear, and left. Oh, but not before scaring our next door neighbors by knocking on their door, still in full gear, and saying they needed to come in to their units to confirm there wasn’t any carbon monoxide.

So yesterday, when my wife suggested I put my car in the garage so it would be warm(er) when I go to work this morning, I said screw it, I don’t care how damn cold it is, I’m going to drive it around the block to let the cats warm up a bit so I don’t have to deal with the stupid carbon monoxide detector again, or slowly kill myself, my wife, and my cats.

Happy winter everyone!

Kinja'd!!!


Replies (12)

Kinja'd!!! "Party-vi" (party-vi)
12/28/2017 at 11:35, STARS: 2

You should get some thick Armaflex or other closed cell insulation and make a little cover for the alarm next time you back the car in to the garage so it doesn’t bother you.

Kinja'd!!! "Mercedes Streeter" (smart)
12/28/2017 at 11:48, STARS: 0

My old apartment had an overly sensitive fire alarm. If you cooked anything on the stove (you could even undercook it), it would go off. And the horrible thing about that alarm is that you have to conduct the full test procedure on it or it’ll blast you with another alarm 6 hours after the initial alarm. And don’t do the procedure right? See you in another 6 hours!!

We ended up taking plastic wrap (the kind you use for leftovers) and wrapped it around the alarm. No more waking up at 3am because we didn’t do the procedure properly, no more annoying ourselves and the neighbours.

Kinja'd!!! "diplodicus" (diplodicus)
12/28/2017 at 11:48, STARS: 0

Do you get billed when the fire dept. shows up or is that just ambulances?

Kinja'd!!! "Textured Soy Protein" (texturedsoyprotein)
12/28/2017 at 11:49, STARS: 0

There was no bill, and I think you only get charged for an ambulance if the ambulance takes you somewhere.

Kinja'd!!! "Textured Soy Protein" (texturedsoyprotein)
12/28/2017 at 11:53, STARS: 0

Every once in a while the smoke detector will go off if I open the oven when roasting something. Sometimes the smoke detector in the hall upstairs will go off if the bathroom door isn’t fully closed when we take a shower and the steam trips it.

The landlord keeps adding more detectors, maybe to comply with updated fire/building codes. Most but not necessarily all of the smoke detectors are hard-wired into the house, and there was one time a couple years ago where one of the batteries in the hard-wired detectors died in the middle of the night which set off all of them, and I didn’t have a damn replacement 9v battery. So I had to run to Walgreen’s at like 3 am to buy a 9v battery and then go to each detector and replace the battery hoping that would shut everything off.

I now always keep a supply of 9v batteries.

Kinja'd!!! "Highlander-Datsuns are Forever" (jamesbowland)
12/28/2017 at 12:30, STARS: 0

Better be safe than sorry. The furnace on my old house wasn’t working so well, eventually I called the heating and AC company. They diagnosed a cracked heat exchanger and said that we had been breathing elevated CO since it stopped working. $10,000 later we had a new heat and AC unit. I also stopped having headaches and nausea after we turned the old unit off.

Kinja'd!!! "Textured Soy Protein" (texturedsoyprotein)
12/28/2017 at 12:42, STARS: 1

Our whole HVAC system was redone this year. We had multiple issues with the furnace, but every time we put in a maintenance request with the landlord, they kept trying to fix it rather than replace it. This included one time in December a couple years ago where we went out to dinner, it was like 4 degrees out, and after we came home the heat wouldn’t come on.

This past spring/summer they finally decided to replace it when we called them with yet another issue with the furnace making a terrible grinding noise. But the HVAC company did a rush job on the install and didn’t even bother to seal the ducts, I had to go back afterwards and tape over all the gaps where air was leaking out.

But...at least it wasn’t the source of the CO.

Kinja'd!!! "Sampsonite24-Earth's Least Likeliest Hero" (sampsonite24)
12/28/2017 at 13:29, STARS: 0

i think someones car is due for a remote start

Kinja'd!!! "DarrenMR" (darrenmr)
12/28/2017 at 18:32, STARS: 0

As someone who has been hospitalized for C02 poisoning, trust me this hassle is better.

Kinja'd!!! "Textured Soy Protein" (texturedsoyprotein)
12/28/2017 at 18:49, STARS: 0

CO2 = carbon dioxide

CO = carbon monoxide

Just sayin...

Kinja'd!!! "DarrenMR" (darrenmr)
12/28/2017 at 18:52, STARS: 0

Yup and I cant edit it, damn.

Kinja'd!!! "wafflesnfalafel" (wafflesnfalafel1)
12/28/2017 at 20:01, STARS: 1

I would think CO2 poisoning might be worse actually... carbonated blood?