HoosierBuddy
Well-known member
A few months ago there was a home explosion in Evansville Indiana. Three people died in the explosion. 5 homes were completely destroyed and many other homes damaged.
At the time, every agency imaginable responded. FBI. PHMSA. ATF. DHS. looking for the cause.
Last week the state fire marshal issued a verdict that the explosion was caused by gas valve that was opened in the basement of a home and had been blowing gas into the home at a high rate for about 2 days before an unknown ignition source touched off the gas explosively.
No word on how the residents didn't notice the hissing or smell...but that's speculation for another day.
So...the PSA thing. It is completely unsafe to ever leave a closed gas valve in a position where simply opening the valve would cause gas to blow freely into a home. Seems pretty obvious, but this happens more than you'd think. Someone changes from a gas stove to an electric stove....they shut that appliance valve, disconnect the gas stove, install the electric and leave the existing (closed) gas valve there with no plug in it. Same thing on water heaters.
It's dangerous. Keep an eye open for that situation all! Takes about 1 minute to put a dab of pipe sealant on a 3/4" NPT plug or 1/2" NPT plug and thread it into the outlet of the valve. That's all that's needed really.
At the time, every agency imaginable responded. FBI. PHMSA. ATF. DHS. looking for the cause.
Last week the state fire marshal issued a verdict that the explosion was caused by gas valve that was opened in the basement of a home and had been blowing gas into the home at a high rate for about 2 days before an unknown ignition source touched off the gas explosively.
No word on how the residents didn't notice the hissing or smell...but that's speculation for another day.
So...the PSA thing. It is completely unsafe to ever leave a closed gas valve in a position where simply opening the valve would cause gas to blow freely into a home. Seems pretty obvious, but this happens more than you'd think. Someone changes from a gas stove to an electric stove....they shut that appliance valve, disconnect the gas stove, install the electric and leave the existing (closed) gas valve there with no plug in it. Same thing on water heaters.
It's dangerous. Keep an eye open for that situation all! Takes about 1 minute to put a dab of pipe sealant on a 3/4" NPT plug or 1/2" NPT plug and thread it into the outlet of the valve. That's all that's needed really.
