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- Newsgroups: misc.consumers.house
- Path: sparky!uunet!europa.asd.contel.com!gatech!news.ans.net!cmcl2!panix!dannyb
- From: dannyb@panix.com (Daniel Burstein)
- Subject: Re: No Hot Water!
- Message-ID: <C17t0n.Hvn@panix.com>
- Organization: PANIX Public Access Unix, NYC
- References: <C0x2pn.GLF@mccc.edu> <880r-vh@dixie.com> <SCOTT.JOHNSON.93Jan18102600@talon.FtCollinsCO.NCR.COM> <1993Jan19.180935.18477@dg-rtp.dg.com> <y1_s6dd@dixie.com>
- Distribution: na
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 17:38:47 GMT
- Lines: 42
-
- In <y1_s6dd@dixie.com> jgd@dixie.com (John De Armond) writes:
-
- >>Or they have been correctly warned that water hotter than 120F can cause life-
- >>threatening scalding of little children who turn it on full blast on them-
- >>selves in the tub.
-
- >Figured I'd flush a safety nazi or two out with that one. I'd be amused
- >to hear any scenario you could come up with where a child could receive
- >a "life threatening" scalding in which the parent was not being irresponsible.
- >If the parent is responsible enough to worry about water temperature,
- >s/he is responsible enough to keep the kid out of boiling water.
-
- umm, have to relate this from PERSONAL experience, both as a paramedic in
- NYC, and having friends...
-
- I have treated numerous peole who have had pretty bad burns from normal
- "hot" water. anything above about 120 can, and will do damage. It won't
- hurt to just dip your finger in, but if you should fall in, or climb into
- a tub with it, or numerous other scenarios.
-
- Yes, you and I might always chck the water temp carefully, but what about
- the day you just step into the tub? won't happen? think of how many times
- you've gone through stop signs without realizing it.
-
- Better to engineer safety right into the system.
-
- btw, there is a (relatively) simple solution (no pun intended). You can
- put a thermostatic mixing valve after the water heater to lower the temp
- from, say, 150 to 120. Or, our friend who kept running out of hot water
- could even turn it up to 195 (you need some margin below boiling).
-
- That way the regular hot water through the home would be <120, but you
- could still tap off the very hot water for things like the dishwasher.
-
- But let me repeat, people are, inded, often burned by regular hot water.
- In fact, plumbing and safety codes REQUIRE various techniques to keep
- maximum hot water temp in specilized environments (nursing homes, for
- example), to be below something like 115 degrees (don't have the code
- with me for the exact temp).
-
- dannyb@panix.com
-
-