Fire Extinguishers « Cole Hardware

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Fire Extinguishers

Question and answer section

Fire Extinguishers

Rating:

Fire extinguisher ratings appear as a series of letters and numbers (e.g., 2A10BC). The letters indicate the class of fire the extinguishing agent is designed for. Depending on which letter they precede, the numbers can indicate either the approximate relative extinguishing potential or the size of fire that can be put out by a trained operator using that extinguisher.

The most reliable rating is that assigned by UL (Underwriters Laboratories — an independent entity that tests consumer products according to governmental safety standards), which appears on the equipment nameplate. Size alone is not a good measure of extinguisher effectiveness (although generally speaking, the larger the extinguisher, the longer the spray time). The efficiency of non-rated, “general purpose” extinguishers is difficult to judge.

The Letters

Different types of fires require different extinguishing agents. Manufacturers choose the right extinguishing agent (e.g., carbon dioxide, dry chemical or foam) for each fire classification. Your job as consumer is to know what type of fire you want protection against, and choose an extinguisher designed to be effective against that type of fire. You do this via fire classifications — the letter (A, B and/or C) that appears in the rating.

Class A fires are the most common type, involving ordinary combustibles such as wood, paper, cloth, rubber and plastics.

Class B fires involve flammable liquids (e.g., gasoline, kerosene, oil), gases and greases.

Class C fires involve electrical appliances, equipment or wiring, where the electric nonconductivity of the extinguishing agent is important (i.e., when there is risk of getting electrocuted). Note: When the equipment or wiring is de-energized (unplugged, not live), remaining combustion is Class A or B, and extinguishers designed for those fires may be safely used.

The Numbers

The number preceding Class A indicates the approximate relative extinguishing potential. This number relates to the square feet of ordinary combustible material the extinguisher can put out, and is dependent on the type of extinguisher as well as efficiency of design and use.

The number used for Class B indicates the square footage of a deep-layer flammable liquid fire that a trained operator can put out.

Choice and Placement

Your choice of extinguisher should be based on potential use. For instance, oil, grease and electrical fires are likely in the kitchen, garage and auto, so the obvious choice would be a BC extinguisher. However, much can be said for being prepared for any situation, so unless the application is specific, choose the most versatile extinguisher, with the largest capacity, that can be easily handled by potential users. For home use it may be best to go with heavy-duty rated, multipurpose (ABC) dry-chemical fire extinguisher.

The National Fire Protection Association recommends you have at least one extinguisher for every 600 square feet of living area. Fire extinguishers should be located on every level of the home — the kitchen, garage and basement should each have its own fire extinguisher. Do not mount too close to the location where the fire might occur — the user should not risk reaching into a fire or going into a burning area to get a fire extinguisher.

Use

Remember these steps for effective fire extinguisher use:

P = Pull the pin.
A = Aim at the base of the fire, staying at least six feet away.
S = Squeeze the handle.
S = Sweep at base of fire from side to side.

Actually, we’d add one more to the top of this list: keep your cool (easier said than done). NOTE: Fight only minor fires. In case of a serious blaze, leave the house immediately and notify the fire department from a neighbor’s home or an alarm box.

Maintenance

Choose and install fire extinguishers with a gauge, and check the gauge once a month. If the gauge reading is low, promptly bring it to a professional (listed in the yellow pages under “fire extinguishers”) to have it “recharged” (filled/pressurized). Also be sure to get it recharged after each use.

This article was derived in part from information provided by the National Retail Hardware Association.

Fire Facts

  • Nearly 80% of all fire fatalities occur in the home. Of those fatalities, approximately 80% occur in single family homes and duplexes.
  • The leading cause of residential fire deaths is careless smoking.
  • The most common location for all household fires is the kitchen. The number two location is the bedroom, followed by the living room/den.
  • Senior citizens and children are at the highest risk of being killed in a fire — more than double the average population.
  • It is very easy to remain asleep in a toxic smoky atmosphere. Most fire victims are dead from exposure to smoke and related toxic gases before the flames even reach them. 60% of residential fire deaths occur at night. Many of these deaths could be prevented with a working smoke detector. Experts estimate that 50% of all smoke detectors need fresh batteries. Battery-operated smoke detectors beep intermittently when the battery is low. If the detector is hard wired and beeps, it is most likely malfunctioning.


Shown at top: Kidde Home/Office Fire Extinguisher — Multipurpose UL rated 3A40BC. Nontoxic monoammonium phosphate dry chemical. Corrosion-proof valve. High visibility gauge. Rechargeable. Maximum gross weight 8 lb. 2 oz.

– Hardware Hotline  January, 2001

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