russ_watters said:Is there any independent confirmation of this? Any real evidence? Ie, blood work on the family and CO readings from inside the house. The photo shows the furnace exhaust and the furnace intake.
The detector, in fact, finally did go off the morning police arrived to investigate Dan Jr.'s death--but only AFTER Dan Jr. had died. According to Dan Thaxton, police left the doors open during the investigation, and when the home was checked for carbon monoxide fumes, the fumes had already disbursed. It is curious that a detector would go off AFTER a child died from carbon monoxide poisoning. Is it possible that these detectors are not calibrated properly to protect the most vulnerable, infants, from low-level effects of CO poisoning. After the CO check came up clean, nobody gave CO poisoning another thought until Tom Rodgers spotted the likely culprit.
They weren't allowed any official Carboxy-Hemaglobin test.January 20, 2004, the Thaxton family's attorney attempted a motion to Judge Kathleen Nelsen for a mistrial in order to present the carbon monoxide information. Judge Nelson recused herself, refused to hear the evidence, and told their attorney that this case would be handled by Judge Stanton Taylor.
As I said before, houses do not have fresh air intakes. They are not required by building codes because the occupancy is low and houses have operable windows. That photo is of the furnace combustion air intake. I'm certain of it - I'll take a picture of mine tomorrow, it is identical. (actually, mine doesn't have the bird screen - it really should)H8wm4m said:Both the house intake and furnace intake are located next to the furnace exhaust.
I know I said "independent" - what I really meant was reputable. Do you have any reputable sources for this? All I see so far is crackpots lying about things that are obvious to people who know about those things.Although I don't know if it would be difficult to do an independent one.
H8wm4m said:Most babies are vegans. Breast milk, fruits, cereals, vegetables - I don't know of any babies who eat pork or beef.
Funny note - beechnut has a apples and chicken baby food
D'oh - somehow I missed that in the photo. I though they were talking about the furnace intake that is a foot below the exhaust. Regardless, the point still stands - houses do not have fresh air intakes. I believe that you are right that that is for ventilation of a crawl space.kach22i said:The rectangular louvered vent...
russ_watters said:D'oh - somehow I missed that in the photo. I though they were talking about the furnace intake that is a foot below the exhaust. Regardless, the point still stands - houses do not have fresh air intakes. I believe that you are right that that is for ventilation of a crawl space.
I'm an HVAC engineer.
It was about five years ago, I guess I pulled the wrong term out of the hat. What ever it was the filter was demanded by the owner after the contractor and I sized the mechanical closet together. Changes is what I remember the most, the room had to be a couple of feet larger - doubled in size. The air had to go down, so I guess that makes it a "high pressure" system?russ_watters said:I'm not sure why any house would purposely be put under negative pressure.
H8wm4m said:and refusal to consider evidence for CO poisining.
Maybe just a high pressure system - meaning a bigger fan to push the air through the thicker filter.kach22i said:It was about five years ago, I guess I pulled the wrong term out of the hat. What ever it was the filter was demanded by the owner after the contractor and I sized the mechanical closet together. Changes is what I remember the most, the room had to be a couple of feet larger - doubled in size. The air had to go down, so I guess that makes it a "high pressure" system?
The way the article reads, they haven't provided any evidence for CO poisoning. If there really is a CO issue there, the necessary evidence (already discussed) really isn't that hard to get (not to mention, it would be easy to fix).H8wm4m said:...and refusal to consider evidence for CO poisining.