- Nov 17, 2019
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This story first broke a few days ago and at the time I guessed CO.
"MOORHEAD, Minn. (AP) — Seven members of an immigrant family from Honduras whose bodies were found inside a Minnesota home last weekend died of apparently accidental carbon monoxide poisoning, authorities said Wednesday."
But there's one thing further down in the story that caught my eye.
"Investigators found that a carbon monoxide detector in the garage had been removed and replaced with a smoke-only detector. Monroe said the van had a half-tank of gas and a dead battery. Asked about the significance, the chief said that in cases of intentional carbon monoxide exposure, vehicles are usually found with empty gas tanks."
Why a half tank I wondered. But then I figured maybe the van stalled. They don't say in this article if the key was in the run position or not though.
But let's say it was. If the van was started and left to run why wouldn't it run out of gas before it stalled? Oxygen deprivation? Internal combustion engines need fresh air to run, no? CO replaces air, so wouldn't a running vehicle stall when it can't get air?. Then the battery would run down due to the ignition system and other power draws.
The CO detector being removed/replaced might not be related at all.
"MOORHEAD, Minn. (AP) — Seven members of an immigrant family from Honduras whose bodies were found inside a Minnesota home last weekend died of apparently accidental carbon monoxide poisoning, authorities said Wednesday."
But there's one thing further down in the story that caught my eye.
"Investigators found that a carbon monoxide detector in the garage had been removed and replaced with a smoke-only detector. Monroe said the van had a half-tank of gas and a dead battery. Asked about the significance, the chief said that in cases of intentional carbon monoxide exposure, vehicles are usually found with empty gas tanks."
Why a half tank I wondered. But then I figured maybe the van stalled. They don't say in this article if the key was in the run position or not though.
But let's say it was. If the van was started and left to run why wouldn't it run out of gas before it stalled? Oxygen deprivation? Internal combustion engines need fresh air to run, no? CO replaces air, so wouldn't a running vehicle stall when it can't get air?. Then the battery would run down due to the ignition system and other power draws.
The CO detector being removed/replaced might not be related at all.
