Wednesday, November 14, 2007

In Mid-June, I Had A Major

I'm also going to pull all the vent fans in my house and look at them.We pulled sample inspections on vent fans in the rest of the complex, and did not find anything unusual.In mid-June, I had a major fire at one of my complexes. So, I do not know if these fuses are common or not.You might want to pull the covers off your vent fans and have a look. We inspected about a third of the fans in the place. Eventually the fan overheats, blows a spark as the motor fails, and ignites the lint. I took it down, disassembled it, cleaned it out, lubed it, and put it back. I got very lucky because a chain of circumstances led to unusually rapid response from both Police and Fire departments.However it got there, it was there - and in quantity. Then it ran cool. According to the tenant's son, it began making a grinding noise minutes before the fire started. Fortunately, it only burned out one unit.As soon as I have enough staff back in place (next week, I hope), I'm going to start an inspection program for all our vent fans in every location.Now, later model vent fans have a thermal fuse in them; if that motor gets too hot the fuse blows.Today, since I am very shorthanded right now, I was running service calls. I have no clue where the lint came from; this is an upscale property in an upscale neighborhood, and we seldom have sanitation problems with our people, and in the majority of cases we return at least part of the deposit (meaning cleaning, damage and repair expense due to tenant negligence is minimal). The vent fan is run a lot, and it pulls this lint/dust in. However, I do not know if ALL vent fans have this feature; the complex I have been discussing was built in the mid '70s and it does not have them, and my house was built in 1992 and IT does not have them in the vent fans. The fan housing was plastic, so it burned and the fire was quickly in the attic.So, what caused the fire in June is this: for some reason, a lot of lint and dust gets into the environment in the apartment. After all, what'll it cost you to do that?. According to my service records, that fan was cleaned and lubed about two years prior, before the current tenant moved in. According to the tenant, it had been working normally the night before the fire.This idea had never occurred to me before, the more so because I cannot account for where the lint came from. The fan motor (which ordinarily should be at most very slightly warm to the touch, after extended running time) was almost too hot to handle. While I was working in there, I took the cover off the vent fan in the bathroom.I've never heard of this problem before, but it bit me hard, and I found another situation that was developing.Bingo! This fan was covered with lint, probably as much as a quarter inch all over the motor and inside the housing.Now, I have been scratching my head over how a vent fan could start such a fire.It seems that the fire started in the vent fan in one of the bathrooms. Fires tend to destroy a lot of clues, so we never figured this one out. Some deposits on the fan. I was working for awhile in an apartment in that complex that came open last weekend; we have.

No comments: