roid wrote:i'd say there was some ignition source nearby. They didn't auto-ignite at only 18C, that's for sure.
(On that note, last night out my window I saw a huge-ass shooting star burn down through the sky, i literally stood up and waited for the impact blast wave (but nope). Fires can come from weird places)
Unless there was some kinda freak-reflection going on with the shiny containers and sunlight, and it heated up to the self-ignition temp that way. I've heard of bush fires starting on their own from bottles or aluminium cans in this manner.
No, one of them started first,
by itself, the one on the left that's burned the most. Kind of surprised me too. I'd never actually seen spontaneous combustion occur. The other 2 were sitting right next to the first one, so maybe those caught fire from the heat or some flying embers from the one already burning. They were burning for at least a half an hour before I saw what was going on. Plus, the cans were sitting
in the sun, so that may have helped things fire up too.
They do have warnings on the cans to soak all used rags in water before disposing of in the trash. I guess it's a good warning to heed.
In another instance of unintended fire rekindling, I had a small wood stove that was used to heat the house in winter. When the fire had burned out overnight, I used to put the ashes in a metal bucket every morning and store them on the brick heat shield the stove was sitting on, to make sure they were dead. They would then be put into the trash on trash day, so they accumulated for over a week one time. One night, I walked downstairs in the dark and saw a faint glow. The ash in the can was actually glowing, still burning, even though they had felt cold several nights before. The can was very hot! I had to take it outside and douse it with water.
I've heard of idiots putting ashes in paper bags and storing them on a porch or in a garage to throw out. One apartment actually caught fire in Portland because they
assumed the ashes were dead. Set the whole unit and the one next door on fire. Ouch! The lesson kiddies, don't assume the ashes from a fireplace or wood stove are dead the next day or two after the fire goes out.
![Surprised :o](./images/smilies/icon_surprised.gif)