Dryers a warning....

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gbb

Squire
Location
Peterborough
Element failed in one of our previous driers and I was absolutely shocked at how much dust/lint there was inside. What seemed worse was when I took the cover off the electrical connections for the element ...even in there was packed with lint. Seemed THE very worst place for it to be. That said, no sign of scorching...but even so.
 

november4

Senior Member
If you have a wood burning stove, fire pit, go camping etc, bag some lint it's the perfect fire starter, which comes back to OP's point
 

dicko

Guru
Location
Derbyshire
My wife and I sold our house and bought a Laundromat in Southbourne, Bournemouth in the late 70s. The Laundromat had four steam heated driers which produced huge amounts of Lint every day. I recognised this as a fire risk so each day at closing rime I thoroughly cleaned all of them out. The Fire Brigade check on the premises complemented us on our thoroughness.
Lint is definitely a fire risk make sure you don’t neglect this.
 

Bonefish Blues

Banging donk
Location
52 Festive Road
My wife and I sold our house and bought a Laundromat in Southbourne, Bournemouth in the late 70s. The Laundromat had four steam heated driers which produced huge amounts of Lint every day. I recognised this as a fire risk so each day at closing rime I thoroughly cleaned all of them out. The Fire Brigade check on the premises complemented us on our thoroughness.
Lint is definitely a fire risk make sure you don’t neglect this.

Kings Cross was caused by similar, with awful consequences.
 

BrumJim

Forum Stalwart (won't take the hint and leave...)
My wife and I sold our house and bought a Laundromat in Southbourne, Bournemouth in the late 70s. The Laundromat had four steam heated driers which produced huge amounts of Lint every day. I recognised this as a fire risk so each day at closing rime I thoroughly cleaned all of them out. The Fire Brigade check on the premises complemented us on our thoroughness.
Lint is definitely a fire risk make sure you don’t neglect this.

I'm now worried about my belly button being a fire risk too.
 

Jody

Stubborn git
Does this still affect more modern driers? Ours has a filter to collect the lint but never thought of checking it internally
 

T4tomo

Legendary Member
Kings Cross was caused by similar, with awful consequences.

No it wasn't, it had nothing to do with lint (or tumble dryers).

Lit match, old grease & wooden escalator, flammable gases, trench effect.
 
OP
OP
Hicky

Hicky

Guru
Does this still affect more modern driers? Ours has a filter to collect the lint but never thought of checking it internally

Mine is a modern dryer, the filter is emptied regularly by Ms H....I know this as she leaves it on the side in the shed(where our dryer is).
 
OP
OP
Hicky

Hicky

Guru
If you have a wood burning stove, fire pit, go camping etc, bag some lint it's the perfect fire starter, which comes back to OP's point

Smear some Vaseline into it and put into a metal tin and it then is perfect even in the rain.....tampons also work well.
 

Bonefish Blues

Banging donk
Location
52 Festive Road
No it wasn't, it had nothing to do with lint (or tumble dryers).

Lit match, old grease & wooden escalator, flammable gases, trench effect.

Wiki extract suggests:

The investigators found a build-up of lubricant grease under the tracks, which was believed to be difficult to ignite and slow to burn once it started, but it was noted that the grease was heavily saturated with fibrous materials (fluff from clothes, tickets and other small litter, human hair, rat fur, etc.)

I have no expertise in this area, but had always understood that the build up of fluff et al was a key fuel to allow ignition by a discarded cigarette or match. Could you explain further please, I'm assuming you have expertise and/or knowledge? I was not, of course, referencing that a tumble dryer was in any way involved, and wouldn't seek to trivialise it.

Wiki link
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King's_Cross_fire
 

BrumJim

Forum Stalwart (won't take the hint and leave...)
Wiki extract suggests:

The investigators found a build-up of lubricant grease under the tracks, which was believed to be difficult to ignite and slow to burn once it started, but it was noted that the grease was heavily saturated with fibrous materials (fluff from clothes, tickets and other small litter, human hair, rat fur, etc.)

I have no expertise in this area, but had always understood that the build up of fluff et al was a key fuel to allow ignition by a discarded cigarette or match. Could you explain further please, I'm assuming you have expertise and/or knowledge? I was not, of course, referencing that a tumble dryer was in any way involved, and wouldn't seek to trivialise it.

Wiki link
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King's_Cross_fire

Thanks for that. Had forgotten about the fine detail.

In my job I'm well aware that discarded cigarettes, matches, etc, are very poor at setting fire to grease and oil. Try it (but don't blame me if it goes wrong). Someone even told me that you can put out a cigarette in a pool of petrol, but I would be too worried about the fumes to try it myself.

Investigated an underframe fire on a train. Noted the area where it started tended to collect leaves, which on their own wouldn't cause a problem as they would burn out very quickly. However the presence of oil / grease in the area give credence to the same fire starting theory. Clearly they wouldn't let us set fire to a train to prove it, and happened so rarely that putting cameras in the location to catch it happening would be pretty pointless too, so at that point it remained a credible theory. Sounds like something similar at King's Cross. Can't really set fire to an underground station as a test, but that fire starting process is too sensible to ignore.
 
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