Hi dmun:
Can you provide a link to the "disasters thread"? I could find no other discussion about this on E-S. The fire occurred last night (9/4).
It would be helpful to know what kind of battery, charger, and charging protocol was used. E.g. Were the battery and charger sold together as a turn-key kit, or was it a more ad-hoc assemblage as we on this forum are likely to use? How sophisticated was the user?
I found another link about this incident here:
http://www.ktvz.com/news/smoky-fire-tears-through-nw-bend-home/27871540
where some interesting statements from a fire official are recorded.
I almost always charge unattended since I don't have the patience to babysit the charging process for up to 12+ hours. My bikes and batteries are stored in a detached garage equipped with an ABC fire extinguisher located near the door. I have another similar extinguisher located just inside the door of my house. Garage is equipped with a smoke detector that is wirelessly networked with my in-house detectors. It would be a bummer to lose the garage and its contents to a fire, so I take precautions:
All of my batteries are LiFe or NCA (Samsung INR-18650-29E), and all are charged and discharged through a working BMS. No exceptions. All batteries are tested when new by charging to BMS cutoff and discharging to BMS cutoff to verify capacity and that the BMS functions as expected before I will charge unattended. Chargers are also tested for max. output voltage, and all of my batteries use the same max charge voltage (29.2-29.4 volts). The LiFe are charged fully before storage (according to manufacturer's instructions), but the NCA batteries are charged to 3.8v/cell before being allowed to sit. Before use I usually charge to 4.1v/cell instead of the maximum 4.2v/cell. Charger hookup and wiring are designed to minimize user error.
I suppose the next step is to charge only in a fireproof vault of some sort, but after eight years of working with this stuff I've never had an incident.