Fire Extinguisher

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Fire extinguishers come in different types to effectively fight different types of fires. They must be properly maintained through regular inspections and recharging to ensure they work properly in an emergency.

The typical steps to operate a fire extinguisher are PASS - Pull the pin, Aim at the base of the fire, Squeeze the handle, and Sweep from side to side.

The main types of fire extinguishers are water, foam, dry powder, carbon dioxide, clean agents like halon, and wet chemical. Each type is suited to certain classes of fire based on the fuel involved.

Fire extinguisher

A fire extinguisher
A fire extinguisher is an active fire protection device used to extinguish or control small
fires, often in emergency situations. Typically, a fire extinguisher consists of a handheld
cylindrical pressure vessel containing an agent which can be discharged to extinguish a
fire.

Usage
The typical steps for operating a stored pressure fire extinguisher (described by the
acronym "PASS") are the following:

P - Pull the safety pin


A - Aim the nozzle at the base of the fire, from a safe distance (*about 4-10 feet
away)
S - Squeeze the handle
S - Sweep the extinguisher from side to side while aiming at the base of the fire
The approximate starting distance varies by the size and type of the extinguisher.
(ie. Water APW vs. 2 1/2 lb. Dry Chemcial.)
o If using a cartridge operated extinguisher you must push down on the
cartridge puncturing lever to pressurize the extinguisher after pulling the
pin.

CO2 fire extinguishers usually have a horn-shaped nozzle. Do not touch


this horn (or the pipe linking it to the extinguisher) when attempting to put
out a fire - your hand may freeze to the extinguisher.

There are various types of extinguishers, which are used for different types of fires; using
the wrong type can worsen the fire hazard, but using the right one can better the situation.
Block quote

== History ==
The modern fire extinguisher was invented by British Captain George William Manby in
1818; it consisted of a copper vessel of 3 gallons (13.6 litres) of pearl ash (potassium
carbonate) solution contained within compressed air.
The soda-acid extinguisher was invented in the 19th century, which contained a cylinder
of 1 or 2 gallons of water with sodium bicarbonate mixed into it. A vial was suspended in
the cylinder containing concentrated sulphuric acid. Depending on the type of
extinguisher, the vial of acid could be broken in one of two ways. One used a plunger to
break the acid vial, while the second released a lead bung that held the vial closed. Once
the acid was mixed with the bicarbonate solution, carbon dioxide gas was expelled and
thereby pressurize the water. The pressurized water was forced from the canister through
a nozzle or short length of hose.
Around 1912 Pyrene invented the carbon tetrachloride or CTC extinguisher, which
expelled the liquid from a brass or chrome container by a handpump; it was usually of 1
imperial quart (1.1 L) or 1 imperial pint (0.6 L) capacity but was also available in up to 2
imperial gallon (9 L) size. The CTC vaporized and extinguished the flames by chemical
reaction. The extinguisher was suitable for liquid and electrical fires, and was popular in
motor vehicles for the next 60 years. The vapor and combustion by-products were highly
toxic, and could cause death in confined spaces.

Classification
Internationally there are several accepted classification methods for hand-held fire
extinguishers. Each classification is useful in fighting fires with a particular group of fuel.

Australia
Type

Water

Pre-1997

Solid red

Current

Class

Foam

Solid blue

Powder

Red with a blue band

Red with a white band

B C E

Carbon dioxide

Red with a black band

A
(limited)

B C EF

Vapourising liquid (not


halon)

Red with a yellow band

B C E

Halon

Solid yellow

Wet chemical

Solid oatmeal

Red with an oatmeal


band

In Australia, yellow (Halon) fire extinguishers are illegal to own or use on a fire, unless
an essential use exemption has been granted.[1]

United Kingdom
According to the standard BS EN 3, fire extinguishers in the United Kingdom as all
throughout Europe are red RAL 3000, and a band or circle of a second color covering at
least 5% of the surface area of the extinguisher indicates the contents. Before 1997, the
entire body of the fire extinguisher was color coded according to the type of
extinguishing agent.

Typical United Kingdom CO2 and water fire extinguishers


Type

Old Code

BS EN 3 Color Code

Fire Class

Water

Signal Red Signal Red

Foam

Cream

Red with a Cream panel


above the operating
instructions

Dry Powder

French
Blue

Red with a Blue panel above


A
the operating instructions

Carbon
Black
Dioxide CO2

sometimes
E

B C

Red with a Black panel above A


B
the operating instructions
(Limited)

Pre-03- Signal red with a


green panel

Halon

Emerald
Green

Wet
Chemical

Red with a Canary Yellow


No F Class panel above the operating
instructions

Class D
Powder

French
Blue

Red with a Blue panel above


the operating instructions

The UK recognizes six fire classes. Class A fires involve organic solids such as paper and
wood. Class B fires involve flammable liquids. Class C fires involve flammable gases.
Class D fires involve metals, Class E fires involve live electrical items and Class F fires
involve cooking fat and oil. Fire extinguishing capacity is rated by fire class using
numbers and letters such as 13A, 55B. EN 3 does not recognize a separate E class - this is
an additional feature requiring special testing (dielectric test per EN 3-7:2004) and NOT
passing this test makes it compulsory to add a special label (pictogram) indicating the
inability to isolate the user from a live electric source.

United States

There is no official standard in the United States for the color of fire extinguishers,
though they are typically red, except for Class D extinguishers, which are usually yellow.
Extinguishers are marked with pictograms depicting the types of fires that the
extinguisher is approved to fight. In the past, extinguishers were marked with colored
geometric symbols, and some extinguishers still use both symbols. No official pictogram
exists for Class D extinguishers, though training manuals sometimes show a drill press
with shavings burning underneath. The types of fires and additional standards are
described in NFPA 10: Standard for Portable Fire Extinguishers.
Fire
Class

Geometric
Symbol

Pictogram

Intended Use

Green Triangle

Garbage can and wood pile burning Ordinary combustibles

Red Square

Gasoline can with a burning puddle

Flammable liquids and


gases

Blue Circle

Electric plug with a burning outlet

Energized electrical
equipment

Yellow Star

Drill press with burning shavings


(not official)

Combustible metals

Black Hexagon

Pan burning

Cooking oils

The Underwriters Laboratories rate fire extinguishing capacity in accordance with


UL/ANSI 711: Rating and Fire Testing of Fire Extinguishers. The ratings are described
using numbers preceding the class letter, such as 1-A:10-B:C. The number preceding the
A multiplied by 1.25 gives the equivalent extinguishing capability in gallons of water.
The number preceding the B indicates the size of fire in square feet that an ordinary user
should be able to extinguish. There is no additional rating for class C, as it only indicates
that the extinguishing agent will not conduct electricity, and an extinguisher will never
have a rating of just C.

For additional US UL rating information see Fast Flow Extinguishers

Installation

Fire extinguishers are typically fitted in buildings at an easily-accessible location, such as


against a wall in a high-traffic area. They are also often fitted to motor vehicles,
watercraft, and aircraft - this is required by law in many juristictions, for identified
classes of vehicles. Under NFPA 10 all commercial vehicles must carry at least one fire
extinguisher (size/UL rating depending on type of vechical and cargo (ie. fuel tankers
typically must have a 20lb. when most others can carry a 5lb.) The revised NFPA 10
created criteria on the placement of "Fast Flow Extinguishers" in locations such as those
storing and transporting pressurized flammable liquids and pressurized flammable gas or
areas with possiblity of three dimensional class B hazards are required to have "fast flow"
extinguishers as required by NFPA 5.5.1.1.

A fire extinguisher fitted to the passenger seat of a car.


Varying classes of competition vehicles require fire extinguishing systems, the simplest
requirements being a 1A10BC handheld portable extinguisher mounted to the interior of
the vehicle.

Types of extinguishing agents


Dry Chemical: Powder based agent that extinguishes by inhibiting the free radicals
produced by combustion. It has no cooling or smothering effect and a partially
extinguished fire will flash back.

Ammonium phosphate, used on class A, B, and C fires. It receives its class A


rating from the agent's ability to melt and flow at 350 degrees to smother the fire.
More corrosive than other dry chemical agents. ABC Dry Chemical
Sodium bicarbonate, used on class B and C fires. Interrupts the fire's chemical
reaction.
Potassium bicarbonate (aka Purple-K), used on class B and C fires. About two
times as effective on class B fires as sodium bicarbonate. The preferred dry
chemical agent of the oil and gas industry. The only dry chemical agent certified
for use in AR-FF by the NFPA.
Potassium bicarbonate & Urea Complex (aka Monnex), used on Class B and C
fires. More effective than all other powders due to it's ability to decrepitate (where
the powder breaks up into smaller particles) in the flame zone creating a larger
surface area for free radical inhibiton

Foams: Mixed with water and applied to fuel fires as either an aspirated (mixed &
expanded with air in a branch pipe) or non aspirated form to form a frothy blanket or seal
over the fuel, preventing oxygen reaching it. Unlike powder, foam can be used to
progressively extinguish fires without flashback

AFFF (aqueous film forming foam), used on A and B fires and for vapor
suppression. The most common type in portable extinguishers
AR-AFFF (Alcohol-resistant aqueous film forming foams), used on fuel fires
containing alcohol. Forms a membrane between the fuel and the foam preventing
the alcohol from breaking down the foam blanket.
FFFP (film forming fluoroprotein) contains naturally occurring proteins from
animal fats to create a foam blanket that is more heat resistant then the synthetic
AFFF foams.
CAFS (compressed air foam system) Any APW style extinguisher that is charged
with a foam solution and pressurized with compressed air. Generally used to
extend a water supply in wildland operations. Used on class A fires and with very
dry foam on class B for vapor suppression.
Arctic Fire is a liquid fire extinguishing agent that emulsifies and cools heated
materials quicker than water or ordinary foam. It is used extensively in the steel
industry. Effective on classes A, B, and D.
FireAde, a foaming agent that emulsifies burning liquids and renders them nonflammable. It is able to cool heated material and surfaces similar to CAFS. Used
on A and B (said to be effective on some class D hazards).

Water Additives:

Wet Chemical (potassium acetate) extinguishes the fire by forming a crust over
the burning oil(saponification). Generally class A and K (F in Europe) only.
Wetting Agents Detergent based additives used to break the surface tension of
water & improve penetration of Class A fires. Enables a 3 litre water extinguisher
to achieve the fire fighting capacity of a 9 litre plain water type

Water: Cools burning material

APW (Air pressurized water) cools burning material by absorbing heat from
burning material. Effective on only Class A fires, but has the advantage of being
cheap, harmless, and relatively easy to clean up.
Water Mist uses a fine misting nozzle to break up a stream of deionized water to
the point of not conducting electricity back to the operator. Class A and C rated.
Used widely in Hospitals.

Clean Agents: Agent does not extinguish by smothering, but displaces oxygen, or inhibits
chemical chain reaction. They are labeled clean agents because they do not leave any
residue after discharge which is ideal for sensitive electronics and documents.

Halon 1211, 1301, a gaseous agent that inhibits the chemical reaction of the fire.
Classes B:C for lower weight fire extinguishers (5lbs or less) and A:B:C for
heavier weights (9-17lbs). Banned from new production, except for military use,
as of January 1, 1994 as its properties contribute to ozone depletion and long
atmospheric lifetime, usually 400 years. Halon was completely banned in Europe
resulting in stockpiles being sent to the United States for reuse. Although
production has been banned, the reuse is still permitted. Halon 1301 and 1211 are
being replaced with new halons which have no ozone depletion properties and
low atmospheric lifetimes, but are less effective.
CO2, a clean gaseous agent which displaces oxygen. Highest rating for 20 pound
portable CO2 extinguishers is 10B:C. Not intended for Class A fires.
Mixtures of inert gases, including Inergen and Argonite.

Class D:

Sodium Chloride/Bicrbonate Urea Graphite and [[Copper] forms a crust over the
burning metal and performs like a heat sink to draw heat away from the burning
material, also smothers to a degree. Sodium Chloride Copper is used for lithium
fires.Class D Fire Extinguisher

Maintenance

An empty fire extinguisher which was not replaced for years.


Most countries in the world require regular fire extinguisher maintenance by a competent
person to operate safely and effectively, as part of fire safety legislation. Lack of
maintenance can lead to an extinguisher not discharging when required, or rupturing
when pressurized. Deaths have occurred, even in recent times, from corroded
extinguishers exploding.
There is no all-encompassing fire code in the United States. Generally, most
municipalities (by adoption of the International Fire Code) require inspections every 30

days to ensure the unit is pressurized and unobstructed (done by an employee of the
facility) and an annual inspection by a qualified technician. Hydrostatic pressure testing
for all types of extinguishers is also required, generally every five years for water and
CO2 models up to every 12 years for dry chemical models.
Recently the National Fire Protection Association and ICC voted to allow for the
elimination of the 30 day inspection requirement so long as the fire extinguisher is
monitored electronically. According to NFPA, the system must provide record keeping in
the form of an electronic event log at the control panel. The system must also constantly
monitor an extinguishers physical presence, internal pressure and whether an obstruction
exists that could prevent ready access. In the event that any of the above conditions are
found, the system must send an alert to officials so they can immediately rectify the
situation. Electronic monitoring can be wired or wireless.
In the UK, three types of maintenance are required:

Basic Service: All types of extinguisher require a basic inspection annually to


check weight, correct pressure (using a special tool, not just looking at the gauge)
and for signs of damage or corrosion, cartridge extinguishers are opened up for
internal inspection & check weighing of the cartridge, labels are checked for
legibility, where possible dip tubes, hoses and mechanisms checked for clear free
operation ;

Extended Service: Water, Wet Chemical, Foam & Powder extinguishers require
every five years a more detailed examination including a test discharge of the
extinguisher and recharging- on stored pressure extinguishers this is the only
opportunity to internally inspect for damage/corrosion. by recharging fresh agent
is used as they all have a shelf life, even water goes foul inside an extinguisher;

Overhaul: CO2 extinguishers, due to their high operating pressure, are subject to
pressure vessel safety legislation and must be hydraulic pressure tested, inspected
internally & externally and date stamped every 10 years. As it cannot be pressure
tested a new valve is also fitted.

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