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Utah-based Vivint Smart Home, Inc is recalling 50,000 smoke and carbon monoxide detectors because the appliances could malfunction and fail to alert consumers of a fire or carbon monoxide leak.
I travel with a portable carbon monoxide detector. Why? In most states, no law requires hotels or vacation rental properties to have carbon monoxide detectors.
A safety systems company has issued an urgent recall for more than 50,000 faulty smoke and carbon monoxide detectors, warning device malfunctions could be deadly.
Carbon monoxide—that invisible, odorless silent killer—could be a risk in your hotel room. Unfortunately there’s no real way of knowing how protected you are unless you take precautions.
When you travel, a carbon monoxide alarm probably isn’t high up on your packing list—but it probably should be, experts say.
A 14-year-old boy's death from suspected carbon monoxide poisoning in a hotel highlights the need for portable carbon monoxide detectors while traveling.