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Arm your house with a free alarm.


Safety move Examiner Editor Roy Wright and children Lucy and Thomas with one of the carbon monoxide carbon monoxide, chemical compound, CO, a colorless, odorless, tasteless, extremely poisonous gas that is less dense than air under ordinary conditions. It is very slightly soluble in water and burns in air with a characteristic blue flame, producing carbon dioxide;  detectors at his home

n VICTIM Dominic Rodgers died aged 10

n TRAGEDY A couple died in a flat above this shop in Lockwood this month

THEY are vital for every home.

And the lifesaving devices now being made available to 1,000 Examiner readers could mean the difference between life and death - literally.

Following the tragic deaths from carbon monoxide poisoning Carbon Monoxide Poisoning Definition

Carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning occurs when carbon monoxide gas is inhaled. CO is a colorless, odorless, highly poisonous gas that is produced by incomplete combustion.
 of a couple in their flat in Lockwood this month and of 10-year-old Dominic Rodgers at his home in Fartown in February 2004, the Examiner and British Gas have teamed up to launch a major campaign about carbon monoxide safety.

The move follows research by the energy firm which showed that - despite three deaths on their doorstep in the past year - Huddersfield people are still ignoring the warnings and failing to protect their homes against carbon monoxide.

Now, British Gas has given 1,000 life-saving carbon monoxide detectors for Examiner readers to claim and make their home safer.

The SF350 detector - made by safety firm SF Detection - is the only carbon monoxide detector recommended by British Gas.

It meets the highest safety standards, conforming to British Standard BS7860, the standard recommended by the Health and Safety Executive and the Council for Registered Gas Installers The Council for Registered Gas Installers (CORGI) operates the registration scheme for gas installers in the UK. Under the Gas Safety (Installation and Use) Regulations 1998 anybody undertaking work on gas fittings or appliances by way of business must be a "member of a  (Corgi corgi: see Cardigan Welsh corgi; Pembroke Welsh corgi. ).

The detectors work like a smoke alarm. If they detect a dangerous build-up of carbon monoxide in your home, they emit a loud, piercing alarm to alert you and allow you time to get out of the house safely and call for help.

The alarm will even alert you if you are asleep - and could save your life and the lives of your family.

Carbon monoxide is an invisible, highly-poisonous gas with no taste or smell. It is produced by faulty heating appliances and claims up to 50 lives each year. It also injures hundreds more.
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Publication:Huddersfield Daily Examiner (Huddersfield, England)
Date:Mar 17, 2005
Words:320
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