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Car explodes, burns house

joseywales

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We all know it's not a good idea to have a gas grill right next to the house, but my bother-in-law's neighbor's driveway is right next to the house. This morning, the neighbor's Jeep exploded and their house caught fire. My BIL helped the neighbor's wife and dogs out of the house. Not a total loss, but it did some serious damage. - it can always bee worse.

It's been hot/humid for a few days, but last night and this morning were cool - high 40s, lows 50s.

Just food for thought when deciding where to place that new driveway. Be safe.
 
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yeldogt

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My tractor caught on fire .. set two of my three cars on fire. It was a domino effect to the house ... total loss except the stone walls.

So the grill set the jeep off?
 
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joseywales

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No grill involved. I was just saying that who knew a car next to the house could be just as bad as a grill. Makes me think twice about parking a car IN the garage, which is under my first floor.
 

aka Larry

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What caused the Jeep to explode?

Are you suggesting those of us who park inside our attached garages should now park in the street because our car might explode?
 

Jeepster04

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Maybe it was a project Jeep? Not sure what could cause a vehicle to suddenly explode just from sitting.

Honda Accords have a recall right now for some 'battery sensor' corroding and catching fire.
 

firebirdparts

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This is garage journal, you know. It should be assumed that the driveway actually goes inside the house. I hope none of my cars explode.
 
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joseywales

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I'm not suggesting anything, merely reporting. I will tell you that we unplug our toaster after every use. All I'm saying is that it makes ME think twice about my wife parking her vehicle inside our attached garage.

I don't believe the owner is a tinkerer with vehicles, and it was his wife's jeep, so it's unlikely that it was a project. I assumed battery, but it just happened the morning, so we'll see if we get more details. Heck, it could have been a laptop or a cell phone exploded in there - though knowing these folks as I do, I doubt it was a laptop and would assume the cell phone was on her person and not in the jeep.

The jeep was totaled. Front tires were completely melted and the rims partially melted. The siding from the house is gone. Fortunately, this house as built before cardboard walls and Styrofoam insulation were code, so the brick behind the siding is unharmed. The brand new wooden fence has looked better though ; )
 

58Yeoman

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In my previous life, my then wife woke me up about midnight, telling me that the neighbors house on the next block was burning. The owner had come home after working the afternoon shift, parked his small Ford PU in the garage and went to bed. The garage door had been open all day, and a s**tload of dry leaves had blown in, and he parked his truck on top of the leaves. The catalytic converter was hot and set the leaves on fire. He and his wife weren't hurt, but the house and detached garage burned to the ground. The heat melted the neighbors vinyl siding with an empty lot between the garage and the neighbors' house.
 

driftpin

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Spontaneous automotive combustion has been tied to conflagrations around the world, and is it coincidence that vehicles involved have been Firebirds? :headscrat

I had a car catch on fire at a single family dwelling when we responded to an alarm on fire-rescue. It was about 3 a.m. and when we got there, an older sedan was buried in a chain link fence along the driveway, stationary except for the rear wheels, which were on fire (the tires), because the vehicle operator had his foot still on the loud-pedal, the engine roaring, and wheels spinning, though the car was entangled in the chain link. The tires had dug trenches in the dirt and stone of the driveway, and the rear axle was resting on the ground.

I approached the driver's door, the window was down, and over the loud exhaust, I asked the driver to take his foot off the gas, and to turn-off the engine. He looked-over at me with bloodshot eyes, and calmly turned his head forward, and ignored me. I reached-in the open window and shut-off the ignition, and put the transmission in park. I could smell the odor of alcohol on his breath, and there were multiple open containers on the floorboards.

I asked him, "do you know where you are?"

He replied that he was on the expressway about 8 miles away, headed home!

While my co-workers continued to extinguish the vehicle fire, we got the inebriated driver out of the car, and he went with us to the county hospital as a 'court-hold' patient. We drew his blood and initiated the chain of evidence for the PD. If the chain link fence hadn't been there he could have driven into the house and caught it on fire.
 

ssdave

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These are the type of things that are nearly impossible to prepare for or guard against. Random events. Same with your toaster. Do you unplug your microwave? How about your electric stove? Do you leave your phone charger plugged in? How about the charger for your laptop? The list goes on and on. You'd have to flip off the main breaker on your house whenever you go to sleep or leave the house unattended to guard against all those things.

What you can do, is make sure your house and garage are built to code, with reasonable precautions. Sheetrock your garage, and make sure you tape and seal all joints. Put appropriate fire stops in the walls of your garage and house when you build it. Store solvents and oils and oil based paints and other flammable items appropriately.

Buy good insurance for the rest of the improbable but high consequence risks. Like your vehicle spontaneously catching on fire. Or your toaster or microwave or stove or phone charger shorting out and starting a fire. Or an airplane falling on your roof. If you live your entire life guarding against somewhat random and very low probability risks, you'll do nothing but avoid risk. Far better to spend your life doing what you want, and manage risks to a reasonable level instead. For me, that does not include parking my car remotely instead of next to my house or in my garage. It does include basic fireproofing of my garage with appropriate materials.
 

aka Larry

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Or an airplane falling on your roof. If you live your entire life guarding against somewhat random and very low probability risks, you'll do nothing but avoid risk.


LOL, this reminds me of my BIL. My nieces wanted to take their Mom on a cruise, because my sister is almost 60 years old and have never been anywhere. Since my nieces knew the first comment from my sister would be "I'd love to, but I can't afford it", the plan was for all of us to chip in and pay her way so it would be 100% free for her. That's when my BIL chimed in and said "She can't go because the ship might be taken over by terrorists". My response was "Yeah, I have to leave now because I hear there my be a meteor headed our way as we speak".

If you live you life worrying about everything that could possibly happen to you, you're not really living, you're just taking up space.
 
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JimVonBaden

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I had a girlfriend who used to unplug everything, check every faucet, and burner on the stove before bed, and before leaving the house. She would then lock the door, unlock it, lock it again, 2-4 times before leaving the house. She eventually gave up driving because she would get home and wonder if she hit someone and didn't know it.

Point? Make reasonable choices, but don't be guided by fear.
 
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joseywales

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Chance favors the prepared mind. If I was a worrier, I wouldn't be driving anymore either:

September 2016, I was driving along in my 2013 Explorer, 11AM, beautiful day in PA, when BHAM! An enormous tree began to fall into the road. I had maybe 3 seconds to react. I twitched the wheel to the right, but thought better of it and stayed the course. I was literally standing on the brakes with both feet and my *** up off the seat.

When it became apparent that I would be under this tree, I brought my *** down and crouched inside the cabin as low as I could, still pressing the brakes as hard as I could. My truck stopped and for about 3 more seconds the tree kept falling on top of me. That was the worst part, wondering if the cabin would hold.

Once the tree stopped, I quickly unbuckled, and reached for my windshield hammer. But why??? The entire cabin was surrounded by large limbs that I clearly could not climb through. It was like Wizard of Oz and the tree had engulfed my truck. So I climbed over the console to the back of the truck. I could see a guy looking inside the vehicle and when he got to the driver's window he was shocked to find no one there. He couldn't see me in the back, through the tinted windows, so I yelled out, "the back! The back!" He then came an opened the hatch and I climbed out.

Folks were looking at me like I was walking on water. They couldn't believe I just walked out of that truck. I was walking like, "yeah, so that just happened." My heart wasn't even racing. I've almost hit squirrels and had a higher heart rate. The fact is, there was no time for an adrenalin rush. It happened that fast.

Key take-aways:

- Speed limit was 35MPH. Anytime I'm in a zone less than 55 MPH, I set my cruise to the speed limit and enjoy the ride. Cops are more likely to whack you in a 35MPH, doing 45, then doing 68 in a 55. The Sgt agreed, if I had gotten to the tree any sooner, I'm crushed. The 18" beam that was at my wheels, would have been on top of my head. If I had tried to gun it an get through, I would be decapitated. The 12" beam now resting at the base of my windshield would have seen to that.

- 10 minutes after the crash, I saw this young girl and her 2 year old son. We began talking and she explained her car was under the tree as well, to the right of mine. She was merging from an off ramp, windows open, when she heard the crack of the tree, then my brakes, then the top branches of the tree landed on her vehicle. The tree had spanned 4 lanes by then. As she was finishing her story, my knees nearly buckled. I realized that had I gone to the right, I would have t-boned her and her son. I still well-up thinking about that. I work for an oil company and the tanker drivers have strict orders. When something goes wrong on the road, 'Hold the line". Don't veer left, don't veer right. Bad things might happen going straight, but veering left or right almost always ends in disaster. I always look for a way out, but there was no time and it was too risky. The tree had snapped about 7 feet off the ground, on he oncoming traffic side of the road - my left. I probably could have shot under there, but then risk a head on collision?? No thanks. Again, mere seconds to decide.

- Texting, reaching for the radio, watching a pretty girl cross the street, and I would have lost the critical few seconds that probably saved my left. I'm MUCH more conscious about districted driving now. The road was clear and 5 seconds later a tree was on me. It CAN happen. I was prepared, maybe a bit lucky as well

- Incidents are rarely accidents. One third of this tree had fallen onto the pedestrian side a couple days before, landing on a small business complex. In fact, it was still resting there when the rest fell into the street on me. The owner had called a tree surgeon and they were supposed to remove the tree 2 hours before I got there. The truth is that tree was overgrown for a long time. The tree had given folks fair warning and it was ignored. Someone could have been killed.

- my wife said the angels were looking out for me that day. I said, "maybe they were out to get me and I was just better than they were." It was a while before she agreed to ride in a car with me again... We kept it fairly lighthearted with my young daughters, but my one daughter finally took exception to that and with good reason. It could have ended very differently, so we let it go at that and moved on. Hopefully other can learn from it.

- Anyone know how to get of the back hatch of an Explorer, from the inside, without breaking the window. The truck was totaled, so it didn't matter. But I don't think there's release like you would see in a trunk.

The End...well, thankfully not ; )
 
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ddurrett896

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I had a girlfriend who used to unplug everything, check every faucet, and burner on the stove before bed, and before leaving the house. She would then lock the door, unlock it, lock it again, 2-4 times before leaving the house. She eventually gave up driving because she would get home and wonder if she hit someone and didn't know it.

Point? Make reasonable choices, but don't be guided by fear.


I seriously LOLed!
 

GTO

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NJ,FL
I had a girlfriend who used to unplug everything, check every faucet, and burner on the stove before bed, and before leaving the house. She would then lock the door, unlock it, lock it again, 2-4 times before leaving the house. She eventually gave up driving because she would get home and wonder if she hit someone and didn't know it.

Point? Make reasonable choices, but don't be guided by fear.

That's OCD......:pimpflash
 

brownbagg

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i dont why but i will wake up every night and check the doors and stove, which i did before going to bed. i guess its something my dad did when i was young
 

nehog

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When I leave my garage/shop I stand at the door, and visually check that nothing is plugged into the bench outlets, all things are turned off.
 

johnnyradiant

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Vancouver, BC
A lady that used to live down the street took about 20 minutes to park her car. The more room she had the longer she seemed to take. I have no idea how long it took her to get out to the car or how long it took to get into her place once parked but that is no way to live.
 

ambenz

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I am going to the garage now and unplug the cheapo power screw driver I have plugged in and charging on the bench...
I do keep all my flammable containers inside a metal cabinet... well the spray paint cans stay out....it is always prudent to be aware and cautious...re-evaluting your current situations is never wrong.
Ya, don't live in fear...minimize risk and just use common sense is all you can do....
 

wssix99

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threadworthlesswithoutpics.gif


Without pictures, it didn't happen...

BTW - Cars don't spontaneously blow up outside unless they are carrying explosives. Or did the car catch on fire and cause a gas grill tank to explode?
 

RVDan

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North America
I have three Jeeps parked in my attached garage. It's unfinished with no drywall or insulation or fireblock.

I have a gas grill on the other side of the house.
 

Jlbc212

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Northeast MA
The fire investigators in my dept. had to periodically attend classes to keep their certifications up to date. An insurance company car fire investigator taught at one of the classes. He stated he would never park a vehicle in a garage attached to a house. He had investigated too many unattended vehicle fires, many that had started in vehicles that had been parked for several hours. I saw many in my career as a firefighter too. It happens.

As to propane gas grills - keep the grill at least 12 ft away from any structure. I saw too many of those type of fires too where a fire starting in the grill quickly spread into a nearby structure. You can keep a natural gas grill closer if you have an easily accessible, remote gas shut off. Most propane grill shutoffs are placed under the grill. The heat from a fire involving the propane gas supply line or the regulator will keep you from getting close enough and will most likely melt the shut-off valve.
 

Perrorojo

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Northern IN
I only read the first post but I've learned that my neighbors Jeep could explode at any moment and burn my house. I sent a PM to American Motors asking for reassurance that my children will no longer have to live in fear.
 
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