No! In fact it will make it much worse by spreading the liquid around.
Baking soda can extinguish small grease fires, electrical fires, and flammable liquid fires. It works by releasing carbon dioxide gas, which helps smother the flames.
If water was flammable, why would firefighters pour it on burning houses? Come in , even a toddler knows the water and fire are opposites and water outs fire out.
Its any fire which involves a liquid substance that can cat light i.e petrol fires are liquid fires, as is over heated cooking oil. This would be fires where the use of water to fight them would prove more damgerous as the pressure of the injected water could and does splash the ignited fired liquid over other distances and this causes more fires to fight.It these styles of fire co2 gas and or foam is normally used - in a kitching cooking oil fire a fire blanket can be used to starve the fire of oxygen.
No, it is not. Because hydrogen is flammable, it will burn in contact of the fire, instead of extinguishing it. So, generally the gas used for extinguishing fire is Carbon dioxide, which is neither flammable nor supports combustion
No, flour should not be used to extinguish fires as it can actually make the fire worse by creating a dust explosion. It is safer to use a fire extinguisher or water to put out a fire.
Baking soda can extinguish small grease fires, electrical fires, and flammable liquid fires. It works by releasing carbon dioxide gas, which helps smother the flames.
If water was flammable, why would firefighters pour it on burning houses? Come in , even a toddler knows the water and fire are opposites and water outs fire out.
The CO2 or the dry Chemicals can be used to extinguish Liquid Fire, though other extinguishes can be used like halogen extinguishers, BUT the halogen is doesn't help as much as it harms, because it causes a toxic gas, and there is Foam extinguishers they come handy too.
Its any fire which involves a liquid substance that can cat light i.e petrol fires are liquid fires, as is over heated cooking oil. This would be fires where the use of water to fight them would prove more damgerous as the pressure of the injected water could and does splash the ignited fired liquid over other distances and this causes more fires to fight.It these styles of fire co2 gas and or foam is normally used - in a kitching cooking oil fire a fire blanket can be used to starve the fire of oxygen.
Water should not be used on fires involving flammable liquids, as it can cause the liquid to spread and the fire to intensify. Instead, fire extinguishers that are specifically designed for flammable liquid fires, such as dry chemical or carbon dioxide extinguishers, should be used.
Oxygen is not flammable, but it supports the combustion of flammable substances. Fire is just a reaction between oxygen and some flammable substance. Hydrogen is extremely flammable and will burn violently in air to form water vapor. Water is completely non flammable and is often used to extinguish fires.
Certainly not ! Class B fires include petrol/oil fires as well as grease (chip pan) fires. Using a water extinguisher will not extinguish these types of fires because - since the flammable substance will float on water - it simply heats the applied water, turning it to steam - resulting in an explosive 'cloud' of burning vapour.
The same way we do, they use water.
B on fire extinguishers generally means that it can be used to put out flammable liquid fires. B1 means it will do so, but not especially well (1 is the lowest ranking).A is for flammable solids, C is for electrical fires.Usually the number appears before the letter, so 1-B rather than B1. Properly used, a 1-B extinguisher can be reasonably expected to put out a puddle of flaming liquid about 2.5 square feet in area. If you've never had specific training in using one, you probably WILL NOT use it properly; for flammable liquid fires, unless it's an extremely small fire it's almost always better to call 911 than to try to use a fire extinguisher on it (you're more likely to spread it than extinguish it).
No, it is not. Because hydrogen is flammable, it will burn in contact of the fire, instead of extinguishing it. So, generally the gas used for extinguishing fire is Carbon dioxide, which is neither flammable nor supports combustion
No, flour should not be used to extinguish fires as it can actually make the fire worse by creating a dust explosion. It is safer to use a fire extinguisher or water to put out a fire.
No, sodium lauryl sulfate is not effective in extinguishing fires. In fact, it may even be flammable under certain conditions due to its chemical properties. Water, fire extinguishers, or fire retardants are more appropriate for putting out fires.