Carbon Monoxide Does Not Announce Itself
Carbon monoxide is a gas with no smell, taste, or colour, and Health Canada notes that it can only be detected with a carbon monoxide alarm. It is produced whenever fuels such as gasoline burn. Crucially, CO does not stay where it is generated — it migrates through indoor spaces, moving freely from garages and sheds into attached living areas, cottages, and campers.
That is the mechanism that makes a self-starting pressure washer different from other recall hazards. A toaster that overheats stays in the kitchen. A pressure washer that starts itself in an attached garage delivers its exhaust into the rest of the house through every seam, vent, and door gap. Occupants get no sensory warning. Exposure to high CO levels can progress from dizziness, chest pain, and difficulty thinking to loss of consciousness, coma, and death. A U.S. occupational case cited by public health authorities documented a farm owner dying after roughly 30 minutes of using an 11-horsepower gasoline-powered pressure washer inside a barn. Thirty minutes.
Federal and Provincial Guidance Already Treats This Scenario as Serious
Even before this recall, the country's CO guidance was unambiguous about gas tools in enclosed spaces. Health Canada's carbon monoxide prevention guidance explicitly says never to operate fuel-burning generators in a garage or shed, and never to run gas-powered equipment such as lawnmowers, snowblowers, or trimmers in those spaces either.
The provinces echo that posture. Ontario's carbon monoxide safety guidance reports that more than 65% of CO-related injuries and deaths in the province occur in the home, and requires CO alarms in any house with fuel-burning appliances or an attached garage. The Ontario Ministry of Labour has separately documented a fatal CO incident involving workers using gasoline-powered pressure washers in poorly ventilated underground parking — one death and seven additional poisonings from a single 2014 event. Quebec's prevention guidance flags gas tools in garages and sheds by name as a recognized CO poisoning trigger.
In other words: the regulators were already warning about the exact scenario this defect creates. The recall closes the gap between owner intent ("I would never run this in my closed garage") and what the machine can now do on its own.
Why "Small Canadian Footprint" Is Not the Right Frame
A 121-unit Canadian distribution looks reassuring next to 16,259 in the U.S. It should not be read that way. The hazard is binary at the unit level — one machine in one closed garage is enough — and the malfunction has been observed six times in the U.S. fleet. The Canadian fleet is small, but it is in active use during the spring season the recall happened to land on. The math says affected owners should treat the risk as personal, not statistical.