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For Your Safety
The Dishwasher Exploded
By Ron Cook
That's
the call a fire department received last winter from a base-housing inspector.
The inspector had been doing normal bi-monthly checks of vacant units when this
happened.
The
inspector's usual procedure was to run the cold water in the kitchen sink, turn
on the dishwasher, go upstairs to flush the commode, and run the water in the
bathroom. About three minutes after she started the
dishwasher, it exploded. The blast propelled the dishwasher (which was
installed under the kitchen counter) across the kitchen. The cabinets, plumbing
and walls were damaged.
The
concussion splintered the face of the rear door to the housing unit and blew it
open, destroying the lock. Pieces of the dishwasher and cabinets were scattered
over 20 feet. The access panel to the attic on the second floor was dislodged,
and the front door was blown open and damaged.
At
first, investigators thought water in the "s" trap had evaporated,
allowing sewer gas to seep into the dishwasher and explode. The next day, Navy
Occupational Safety and Health (NAVOSH) technicians tested all kitchen-sink
drains in vacant units for signs of sewer gas. The results were negative.
During
the course of the investigation, a maintenance worker in
the housing department pointed out a paragraph in the dishwasher-owner's manual
to the NAVOSH specialist. It read, "...under certain conditions, hydrogen
gas may be produced in a hot water system that has not been used for two weeks
or more. If the hot-water system has not been used for such a period,
before using the dishwasher, turn on all hot-water faucets and let the water
flow."
The safety specialist returned to three of the vacant housing units
and ran the hot water to test for emission of hydrogen gas. The meter readings
went off scale in these units. Then he ran hot water in
three occupied units and got zero readings. When he ran hot water in an upstairs
bathroom in the unit where the dishwasher exploded, he got an extremely high
reading.
After
NAVOSH personnel made several calls to the Frigidaire Company about the
incident, a person from their legal department returned his call and told him
that Frigidaire was sending two engineers to investigate the exploding
dishwasher.
The
engineers and NAVOSH personnel tested hot water in two vacant units. They placed
clear garbage bags over the faucets to sample for gas contents. The first test
resulted in the bag filling with about one to two quarts of water and a cubic
foot of gas. They suspected the bulk of the gas was a
combination of hydrogen and oxygen, which was generated by electrolysis in the
hot-water heating systems.
One
of the engineers explained that there is no way to stop hydrogen gas from
forming in hot-water heaters because of the metals used in constructing the
tanks. Hydrogen gas isn't soluble in water, so it
remains in the water-heater plumbing system as a gas under pressure. In
most homes, the gas will
migrate to the upper levels
of the house, where it harmlessly is expelled from water faucets there. However,
occasionally, it can end up trapped in the plumbing lines. In that case, when a
lower level faucet (or dishwasher) is turned on, the gas is pushed through the
outlet rather than finding its way to the upper level.
Hydrogen
gas has one of the broadest flammable ranges of any gas. Just about any mixture
will be enough to result in an explosion. The engineer theorized that the gas
was forced through the dishwasher, and the timer or starter relay had enough
heat to ignite the gas. However, the dishwasher was destroyed, which made it
impossible to determine the exact source of ignition.
The engineer said this was the first time he had heard of a dishwasher exploding, but he had heard stories of small fires at faucets because people had cigarettes in their hands when they opened a hot-water faucet that had not been opened for some time. Later, in a telephone conversation, he told the NAVOSH person that he had talked to a few old-timers in the water-heating industry, and one of them had reviewed a mishap about a washing machine blowing up in the '60s.
What This Means
to You
When you move into a house or apartment that has been vacant, hydrogen gas may have built up in hot water lines, which could cause an explosion. The same is true when you return home from a vacation or open up a vacation home that has been shut.
ORM Lesson
Appliance
manufacturers can do nothing to prevent this type of thing from happening again,
but you, as a resident or housing inspector, can do a short ORM assessment to
prevent such a recurrence. You need to know that hydrogen gas can accumulate in
hot-water systems that have not been operated for a period of time. You figure
the risk of something going wrong when you turn on a dishwasher to either check
it or operate. If you have been using it daily, there is hardly any risk.
When
you go to start the dishwasher, ask yourself how long the unit has been vacant.
If it's more than a couple of weeks, you need to think about getting rid of the
gas before you turn on the dishwasher. If you suspect
hydrogen gas may have built up in the hot-water system, flush it by turning on
all hot-water faucets in the building and letting them run for several minutes. And
don't smoke while you're doing it. Make it a habit of doing this
every time you inspect a building.
If you live in the home and are away for a vacation, do this every time you return home.
This report is provided by Good Humor Balloons as part of the Special Report Network.
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