Fiery hazards of home heating
Proper use of home heating equipment greatly cuts the risk of fire.
Photo: Haonavy/Flickr
According to a recent report by the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), nearly 1 in 5 home fires in 2009 were caused by home heating equipment. This puts heating at a very close second to cooking as the top cause of home fires. The report cites many other interesting, if grim, statistics. For example, only 12 percent of home heating fires are due to mechanical failure or malfunction, while 53 percent of deaths related to home heating fires result from combustibles being too close to heat sources; that is, from not keeping heaters a safe distance from things like drapes, clothing and furniture. As you'll see here, the great majority of home heating fires are entirely preventable.-
When choosing a portable heater, make sure it has temperature control and an automatic safety shutoff if the unit tips over, and that it bears the "UL" (Underwriters Laboratories) stamp of approval.
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Place heaters on a solid, flat surface, never on carpeting, rugs or fabric.
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Turn off space heaters when you're out of the room or sleeping.
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Keep heaters at least 3 feet away from all combustibles. Never lay clothing to dry over a heater.
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Don't use extension cords to plug in electric heaters. (However, since people often ignore this advice, here's the reasoning: Regular skimpy cords can't handle the power draw of some space heaters and can melt and/or short out (it happened to me once). If you use an extension cord, get a beefy one from the garage (like a 12-gauge power tool-type cord), and plug it into a GFCI outlet, if available. If any cord gets hot while running a space heater, it's too small for the power load.
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Have the fireplace and chimney (flue) professionally inspected and cleaned once a year.
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Burn only well-seasoned (dry) wood; "green" wood produces more creosote.
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Don't burn trash, large quantities of paper, or any flammable substances (like gas or lighter fluid) in the fireplace.
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Keep combustibles well away from the fireplace opening.
































