Fire and Fire Safety
Carbon Dioxide Extinguishers (CO2)
Used for class B and C fires. Contains carbon dioxide and are highly pressurized. Also, they don't leave harmful residue.
What do you use to put out class A fires?
APW extinguishers, or water extinguishers are only used for class A fires
Class D Fires
Class D Fires are combustible metal fires. Commonly found in a chemical laboratory. Magnesium and Titanium are the most common types of metal fires. Once a metal ignites do not use water in an attempt to extinguish it. Only use a Dry Powder extinguishing agent. Dry powder agents work by smothering and heat absorption.
If a fire is growing as you fight it, what should you do?
Get away from it and call the fire department.
Class C Fires
Involve electrical equipment such as appliances, wiring, circuit breakers, and outlets
Class B Fires
Involves flammable and combustible liquids and gasses such as gasoline, oil, paint, alcohol, kerosene, grease. Fires involving burning gasses, are most easily extinguished by shutting off the source. Burning liquid fuels are extinguished by a proper application of foam or dry chemical agents.
Class A Fires
Ordinary combustible materials, such as wood, cloth, paper, rubber, grass, plastics.
Fires must have these 3 things
Oxygen, fuel, ignition source (heat)
How to use a fire extinguisher/P.A.S.S.
Pull the pin at the top Aim at the base Squeeze the lever slowly Sweep from side to side
If you catch on fire....
Stop, Drop, and Roll!
one of the most effective ways to put out a small fire
a fire extinguisher
fuel
a material that releases energy when it burns
to deprive a small kitchen fire of oxygen, you can cover it with this common kitchen item
a pot lid
combustion
a rapid reaction between oxygen and fuel
A grease fire in your kitchen can be extinguished with this common kitchen ingredient
baking soda
fire that causes the most deaths from carelessness
cigarettes
Dry chemical extinguishers
come in a variety of types and are suitable for a combination of class A, B, or C fires. They are filled with foam/powder and pressurized with nitrogen.
Fire Triangle
fuel, heat, and oxygen - remove one side to stop fire
Water extinguisher
never use a water extinguisher on grease fires, electrical fires. The flames will spread. Water extinguishers are filled with water and pressurized oxygen.
heat's role in starting a fire
providing the activation energy needed to begin the combustion reaction
three most common causes of house fires
small heaters, cooking, faulty electrical wiring
every home should have one on every floor
smoke detector
oxygen
the missing ingredient necessary to start and maintain a fire if you have fuel & heat
Fire
the rapid release of energy from a fuel source in the presence of oxygen after an igniting event
How does water remove two parts of the fire triangle?
the water covers the fuel which keeps it from coming it contact with oxygen. also evaporation of the water uses a large amount of heat causing the fire to cool