GasKnight vs Kidde Showdown - Test with Live Gas

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  • Опубліковано 14 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 10

  • @jjmontana9451
    @jjmontana9451 Рік тому +8

    that's some dangerous test. an outlet on the top of the gas burner. hahaha

  • @Fredengle
    @Fredengle Місяць тому

    all I can say is if your willing to risk it I would be interested in seeing the same test gasknight vs brk/first alert explosive gas alarm while I should not encourage dangerous acts I think scientific innovation is important

  • @deadeyedsam850
    @deadeyedsam850 Місяць тому

    Nice to know that they work , i had been researching gas dectors hoping to see someone testing one and came across this video ,ua-cam.com/video/Fw1DuTsNPi4/v-deo.html , this youtuber decided to "borrow" a bit of your video

  • @Sylvestershows
    @Sylvestershows 5 місяців тому

    Even at a low battery, it still went off.

  • @szhanecruz4175
    @szhanecruz4175 2 роки тому +2

    GasKnight seems to work better but Kiddie seems to be louder.

    • @Fredengle
      @Fredengle 9 місяців тому

      thank you for being willing to test this I am not convinced kidde products work well the sensor is not really what I was concerned about i am worried about customer service I guess you dont know that kidde did not want to honor my claim for a recalled smoke alarm they only reactivated my claim when I went on social media and left a horrifically negative review that included a report that was titled Notice of child endangerment!!!

    • @Muonium1
      @Muonium1 7 місяців тому

      @@Fredengle dangerous gas leaks in homes are slow and cumulative, a 20 second difference in detection alert times as demonstrated here is definitely not going to make any difference in the real world. Furthermore, they are all using more or less the exact same tin oxide combustible gas sensor for detection.

    • @JasonTaylor-zf6fo
      @JasonTaylor-zf6fo 2 місяці тому

      @@Muonium1 I disagree. If one has accidentally left an unlit burner on and walks away 20 seconds might be helpful. If a big water heater input breaks, that's a HUGE amount of gas per second.