- By Shailvee Tiwari
- Mon, 23 Jun 2025 01:25 PM (IST)
- Source:JND
LPG Blast Viral Video: A spine-chilling video is going viral, showing a man and woman narrowly escaping a massive fire caused by an LPG cylinder leak inside a house. The explosion, caught on CCTV, shows how quickly things turned dangerous and how lucky the two were to make it out alive. The incident reportedly happened around 3 PM on Wednesday, June 18. In the video, a woman is seen trying to stop gas leaking from a red cylinder lying on the floor. When she can’t control it, she runs out to get help. Soon, she returns with a man. Both enter the room from different doors and try to close the gas pipe valve. But before they succeed, the gas ignites, leading to a powerful blast that sets the room on fire.
Luckily, the windows and doors had been left open, which helped reduce the impact. Both the woman and the man escaped just in time, unharmed. The video is now widely shared online, with viewers shocked by how close the escape was.
Watch The Viral Video:
They were lucky that all the doors and windows were open, which allowed much of the gas to escape outside and significantly reduced the impact of the explosion. pic.twitter.com/HhS9TTz6m8
— Satyam Raj (@Satyamraj_in) June 22, 2025
The viral video shared on X (formerly Twitter) by the handle '@Satyamraj_in' was captioned, "They were lucky that all the doors and windows were open, which allowed much of the gas to escape outside and significantly reduced the impact of the explosion." The video shared yesterday garnered 856k views from people. Shocked online users couldn't resist expressing their views in the comment section.
One user wrote, "Open doors saved lives this time. Let’s not depend on luck-awareness prevents disasters. Stay alert, stay safe." "That's why PNG connections are the best, but most of Bharat doesn't have this facility. Under the "Urja Ganga" project, PNG connections are being built pan Bharat," a second user added. "To their happiness, the doors and windows were open, resulting in a large amount of gas leaking out, and weakening the impact of the explosion," added a third user.
"Fire occurred in the kitchen, but how come it happened only when they entered? Something triggered?" a fourth user wrote. "This is a lucky case; they could've ended up with serious injury or worse. In such cases, if the power main switch is outside, turn it off, leave the room open for a few more minutes, like 30 or 45. Let the gas dissipate outside, then enter the room without turning on the power," added another user.