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chaewon

chaewon

Member
Jan 8, 2026
65
3 bedrooms, 1 hallway, 2 bathrooms, 1 kitchen, 1 living room. will obviously be alone the whole day. What is the fastest and safest way for others in the Building to fill up my apartment or atleast the kitchen with enough CO to ctb?

I know modern day kitchen appliances have stuff that prevents gas leaks all the time, but yet I always hear about accidental CO deaths.

I can be able to seal everything but I would prefer if i can keep it in the kitchen just so nothing seeps to the buildings hallways. There has to be a way to cause a malfunction in any of those appliances to cause a fatal leak even if it will take a couple hours.

I have a boiler, a stove, washing machine, & drier in my kitchen.
 
NotSoEnchanted

NotSoEnchanted

Student
Dec 26, 2025
110
For the safety/wellbeing of others in the building and first responders, I would recommend using the charcoal brick method in something like a tent or vehicle instead. Tampering with an appliance in an apartment building is just too risky and not right IMO. At the very least your building will be evacuated, at the worst you fuck up and poison your neighbors/create a fire. From my understanding, CO levels will eventually drop after you've passed with the charcoal brick method, whereas CO levels will not when you tamper with an appliance. It'll just keep omitting it and create a real danger to those around you. Not to mention if SI kicks in and you try to escape, you could let out the CO from the contained space into the rest of the building
 
S

snowboard9098

New Member
Mar 21, 2026
2
Co2 method seems like my favorite rn. Interested about this as well.
 
a-lien

a-lien

waiting for the space shuttle
Feb 22, 2026
71
I only heard that CO is a "heavy" gas maybe ? and when you are upstaits, it can go down, because of the heaviness (sry for the bad english) I hope you undrstand. I mean as a risk for other people...
but I'm not sure if this is correct.. maybe another person knows more...
 
chaewon

chaewon

Member
Jan 8, 2026
65
I only heard that CO is a "heavy" gas maybe ? and when you are upstaits, it can go down, because of the heaviness (sry for the bad english) I hope you undrstand. I mean as a risk for other people...
but I'm not sure if this is correct.. maybe another person knows more...
I dont think it can go down between floors in an apartment building, i think u mean in terms of density where it would rest under other gases in the air in the same space but i am not educated on this either
 

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