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Tealight candles from Dollar Tree cause BIG flame
Posted Sun November 15, 2009 12:00 pm, by Courtney G. written to Dollar Tree Stores, Inc.
Write a Letter to this Company
About a month ago, I purchased a set of 8 pumpkin scented Luminessence brand tealight candles from the Dollar Tree on Coliseum Dr. in Hampton, Virginia. I have bought this brand of candles before (in the unscented tealight candles) and have had no problems until tonight.
The unscented tealight candles had just died out so I decided to light 3 of the pumpkin tealights in a glass candle holder I had recently purchased. This particular holder holds two tealight candles on the bottom and one tealight candle on the top. I placed the 3 candles as described and lit them. The candle holder was not placed near any vents or places where a draft might occur and the candle holder was always in my view.
After about 15 minutes, I noticed that the top candle was letting off more flames than the bottom two. This made me nervous. I blew out the bottom two candles but was unable to blow out the top candle. When I attempted to blow it out, the flame only grew. I do not have a candle snuffer so I attempted to pour about a teaspoon of water over the top candle. This was a big mistake as this caused the flame to shoot up about 5 1/2 feet and then die down to its original-sized flame. My fire alarm went off and I panicked. I got out a fire extinguisher and paced around my room, totally freaked out. 2 minutes later, the candle finally died out. I, however, am still waiting for my heart to beat at its normal pace.
Although my candle holder is ruined (which is in large part my error as cold water + hot glass = cracked glass), there is nothing that can be done to rectify the situation. I am not sure if the candle was defective, or some atmospheric change in my apartment caused it to have a much higher than normal flame, but I will not be buying candles from your store again. I want this situation brought to your attention because I feel I was a responsible candle user, and there is a possibility that these particular candles are defective in some way. Thank you for your time.
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by james k. Posted Thu May 31, 2012 @ 9:05 AM
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OMG! I had bought the birthday cake scented candle couple years ago and the bottom got so hot it blackend the entertainment system i had it sitting on top of. I called dollar tree and sent them pics and video documentation of the event and all i wanted was my candle replaced. I was told well get back w u...needless to say, still waiting.
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by MOOBS Posted Mon March 28, 2011 @ 2:38 PM
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I am finding it difficult to visualize 5 1/2 feet of flames shooting out of a TEA light.
Although I am not doubting any of it, being from Dollar Tree.
I purchased four new stove "eyes" from Dollar Tree once, they were black, turns out the black paint on them was also flamable. Although there were no large flames, those suckers melted like ice in the sun and stunk to high heaven for days.
Flamable stove eyes? Really?
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by johnfaust Posted Wed September 8, 2010 @ 5:30 AM
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Any candle on fire will blast into a big flames. When I was kids we use this as simple fire bomb.
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More than likely these candles were made in a foreign country w/out the safety guidelines that the US has. It sounds like to me they used an oil base substance as a scenting agent and probably assumed that no one would ever throw water on it. I usually get my candles from Walmart. They are cheap (sometimes more cost effective than the dollar store) and reliable. If you are ever in doubt, throw baking soda on the flame instead of water. This will prevent you from turning your candle into a blow torch again.
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by Lylyness Posted Tue November 17, 2009 @ 8:24 PM
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This is a great letter! It very calmly explains an extremely stressful experience. Your acknowledgement of your own error really adds to your reasonable tone. (You sound much more collected than I would.) I hope you get a response, you deserve one! :)
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by jeishere Posted Mon November 16, 2009 @ 4:46 PM
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Glad everything is alright.
Did you trim the wick? All candle wicks should be trimmed to under 1/2 inch. The longer the wick is, the bigger the flame will be and the more irregular it will burn as the wax will be heated up too quickly/unevenly. I assume being dollar store candles, the wicks are not nicely trimmed and consistent.
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by Courtney G. Mon November 16, 2009 @ 1:53 PM
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by otokujin Posted Fri November 20, 2009 @ 8:02 PM
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no they said ice plus boiling water re read it
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by Kim R. Posted Sun November 22, 2009 @ 1:53 PM
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"using water to extinguish a grease fire - FIREBALL
putting boiling water into oil - FIREBALL
adding ice water to boiling oil - FIREBALL"
... I do not see ice + water. :)
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While this is definitely a hazard, there's something timely to this letter with the holidays coming up.
You might consider sending a copy of this to your local fire department to see if they have any safety awareness lessons coming up that they could warn people about this product in. If nothing else, save someone else from risking what could turn out to be a catastrophe!
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