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Exploding Gas Cans

Defects in manufacturing and design common in many portable gasoline containers, including Blitz gas cans, can result in severe burn injuries and burns to adults and children. Gas can explosions can cause severe burn injury.

Safer alternative designs and proper warnings can prevent many devastating burns and injuries from spills or can explosions.

If you fill the gas can while holding it off the ground the static electricity can cause an explosion. Sliding it across a truck bed liner can cause an explosion. Even a small spark from your trunk latch could ignite the gas can.

Devastating third degree burn injuries and death are commonly associated with gas can explosions, which often carry five gallons of gasoline and are left in garages and homes, within easy reach of children.

Gas can explosion lawsuits allege a failure to warn consumers about the dangers associated with the exploding cans. In many cases, gas can makers mold the purported warnings into the side of the container. The small raised letters in the red plastic are often not noticed by users or are difficult to read.

Gas can explosions could easily be avoided with slight changes to the design of the container as well as with proper warning information made easy to access.

The problems associated with gas cans include:

Young children often attempt to imitate their parents, and most cases involving severe gas burns to kids under 6 stem from situations where they removed the cap and attempted to pour gasoline on a toy mower or their bicycle. As a result of the weight of the 5 gallon gasoline containers, the children often end up covered in gas, and they can suffer severe injuries if the vapors ignite.

If you have been burned by an exploding gas can, call Jonah Flynn, a burn lawyer who handles burn injury lawsuits across the country.


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