There are five classes of fire in South Africa. They are: Class A - Solid combustibles Class B - Liquid combustibles and gases Class C - Electrical fires Class D - Metal fires Class F - Consumeable liquids
4 Classes of Fire.CLASS A(ORDINARY COMBUSTIBLES)CLASS B(FLAMMABLE LIQUIDS & GASES)CLASS C(ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENTS)CLASS D(COMBUSTIBLE METALS)CLASS K(COOKING OILS & FATS)
1. Class A - Ordinary combustibles e.g wood, paper etc 2. Class b - flammable and combustible liquids 3. class c - electrical equipment
There are 5 classes of fires (3 common and 2 specialty). These are common combustibles, flammable liquids and gases, live electrical equipment, combustible metals, and cooking media. These fires are then each classified into 5 groups.
The letter indicate the types of fire the extinguisher will put out. They are, A: Common combustibles: Wood, Paper, Cloth B: Flammable Combustibles: Gas, Propane & Solvents C: Electrical: Wires & Motors D: Combustibles: Magnesium & lithium K: Cooking Media: Oils
Class A combustibles are generally considered to be ordinary items such as wood, paper, trash. Class A fires are extinguishable with a Class A fire extinguisher -(Water)
For the best results in the fire sting wisher national directly into the biggest part of the flame is true or false
The type of fuel or source of heat. For example, A: ordinary combustibles, B: flammable liquids, C: electrical heat source, D: flammable metals, K: combustible cooking media (deep fat)
By throwing them out.
Remove anything that can burn.
If you fail 4 classes you will still be classified as a 9th grader.
Depends on wind direction and flammable materials.