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Journal Article

Citation

Sahmel J, Gaffney S, Knutsen J, Epstien B, Paustenbach D. Int. J. Veh. Safety 2014; 7(3-4): 409-424.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Inderscience Publishers)

DOI

10.1504/IJVS.2014.063251

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Carbon monoxide (CO) is a well-known asphyxiant. As part of an incident investigation involving two fatalities, a study was conducted to determine key factors that influence CO concentrations inside motor homes/recreational vehicles. Test parameters examined included the condition of the on-board generator exhaust pipe (attached/detached), generator load (<1-20 amps), position of ventilation hatches (open/closed), parking location (adjacent/perpendicular to a masonry wall), and weather conditions (breezy/calm). A tracer gas test was also performed of the motor home undercarriage because of concerns for possible damage (no visible damage was observed).

RESULTS showed that all five parameters affected the CO concentrations detected within the motor home, but the generator exhaust tailpipe was found to have the greatest impact. Further, a specific combination of conditions, along with documented invisible undercarriage leaks, was necessary for CO concentrations to become high enough to produce acutely toxic and fatal conditions inside the motor home. Copyright 2014 Inderscience Enterprises Ltd.


Language: en

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