‘Extremely risky’: Feds urge against using select fire pits after 2 deaths, 60 injuries
‘Extremely risky’: Feds urge against using select fire pits after 2 deaths, 60 injuries
Federal regulators are urging people not to use liquid-burning firepits following two deaths and 60 injuries within the history five years.
The fire pits that require users to pour isopropyl rubbing alcohol or another liquid fuel into an open container and then ignite at the same spot are considered “extremely risky,” according to the U.S. customer Product Safety fee.
In an alert issued Thursday, the fee insisted consumers immediately stop using and dispose of these products, adding they should no longer be sold. The warning does not refer to a specific brand but to all fire pits that match the product description.
The fire pits presents two major hazards, including the hazard of third degree burns dealt in less than a second, caused by flame temperatures over 1,600°F. The fee also warned that flames can jet out of the container when refueling a pit with an energetic fire.
“Igniting a pool of alcohol or other liquid fuel in a fire pit’s open container creates an uncontrollable pool fire, which can suddenly produce larger, hotter flames that can spread beyond the fire pit product,” the CPSC wrote. “A tiny flame in the fire pit can be challenging to view and can ignite alcohol or other liquid fuel as it is poured, causing an explosion that propels flames and burning liquid onto the customer or bystanders.”
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CPSC releases photos of fire pits included in warning
Fire pit explosion killed elderly couple in June
The type of fire pits included in the recall were responsible for two deaths and at least 60 injuries since 2019, according the CPSC, which did not specific what the incidents were.
In June, a fire pit explosion reportedly killed an elderly couple during a Father’s Day household assembly in Dover, recent Hampshire.
Herm and Thelma Stolzenburg, both 93, died when the tabletop fire pit suddenly exploded and engulfed the two in a tragic accident, local stations WBZ-TV and WMUR-TV reported. The couple, who were married for 71 years, died a week after the incident from third-degree burn injuries.
“It was a nanosecond, and the flame just came off of that thing,” the couple’s daughter Dee McEneaney told WMUR-TV. “There was no period to react in any other way than I did. But to just get up and commence screaming and try to assist. I was trying to bat the flames on my mother with my hands, and my Dad too, and I look at her and have to leave to my Dad.”
The pair shared three children, three grandchildren and six great-grandchildren, WMUR-TV reported.
Nearly 90,000 Colsen fire pits recalled in October
On Oct. 17, The CPSC issued a recall for 89,500 Colsen fire pits ranging from 5 to 18 inches wide, and sold through several retailers including Amazon, Wayfair and Walmart between January 2020 to July 2024.
The fee said the recall was due to 31 reports of “flame jetting and flames escaping” from the fire pits that caused 19 burn injuries.
Two of the reported injuries left third degree burns to more than 40% of victims’ bodies, the CPSC reported, and “at least six incidents have involved surgery, prolonged medical treatment, admission to burn treatment facilities, short-term disability, setback of function, physical therapy, or permanent disfigurement.”
Contributing: Max Hauptman
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