It smothers AND cools because the extinguishing agent is made up of foam and water. The main reason for the foam is to keep vapors from rising from the flammable liquid and the water is naturally cool.
Never ever use water on a gasoline fire or the fire will just spread. Smother it with sand, dirt, or a fire extinguisher specifically made for a gasoline fire.
water, foam, dirt, fire blanket and just about all of them dirt is always the best and there is lots of it
Absolutely not - water just spreads the grease and makes the fire worse. Smother a grease fire with an extinguisher or a pot lid or sand or baking soda.
i think... water hose fire extinguisher sand CO2 Gas Foam just a guess :)
"Just how does a fire extinguisher work?" is a perfectly good interrogative sentence.
Direct the extinguisher at the base of the flames using a sweeping motion
You can make over 200 words just from "extinguisher". so "gator fire extinguisher" would have many more than that.
They can use one of three gases. In a foam extinguisher, it's usually compressed air which is very cheap--the price is just the electricity required to make it--and works well. They can also use carbon dioxide or nitrogen.
never put water on it! it will just make it spead worse! you want to smother it! use flour or a towel/cloth to smother the flame
High density foam is just your typical foam. It does not conform to your body when it heats up like memory foam does.
You just click while holding it.
B-I is the minimum US Coast Guard approval rating for extinguishers on powerboats. It corresponds to a UL Class 5-B:C, 2-pound, dry chemical extinguisher that has been properly packaged and mounted for USCG approvals as well. It could also mean a 4-pound CO2 extinguisher or a 7-quart foam extinguisher. What can you do with it? Well, a B-1 rated extinguisher is just the thing for putting out "flammable liquid" fires on boats, a B-1 or B-2 rated extinguisher being required by the Coast Guard to operate the vessel. If the gasoline or diesel fuel spills and catches fire, your extinguisher will probably be adequate to put it out, provided that you act promptly. The UL 5-B rating implies that a novice firefighter can extinguish 5 square feet of flaming liquid fuel using that extinguisher. The C rating means it is also approved for use on energized electrical fires, i.e., it is non-conductive.