From the Chief Inspector:
Normally articles about boiler explosions arrive on my
desk, but recently an article on an exploding dishwasher
arrived, which I thought would interest everybody.
A person was checking vacant housing units and started
the dishwasher as part of the inspection. A few minutes
later the dishwasher exploded, doing considerable damage to the housing unit.Nobody was hurt in this incident
but the potential was there.
At first it was assumed that sewer gas had entered via the
drain connection but no evidence of sewer gas could be
found in other similar vacant housing units. The dishwasher owner ’s manual provided the answer “…under
certain conditions, hydrogen gas may be produced in a hot
water system that has not been used for two weeks or
more. If the hot-water system has not been used for such
a period, before using the dishwasher, turn on all hot-
water faucets and let the water flow.”
Tests were carried out on the water lines and extremely
high hydrogen readings were found.
Just as operators would not assume that other abandoned
piping was safe to work on without checking for explosive contents,even non-flowing hot water lines can be
seen to pose a significant hazard potentially.
This article originally appeared in The Pressure News , Volume 6, Issue 3, September 2001
First published February 2002