Without fuel the fire will go out.
If you remove fuel, oxygen, or both from a fire, the fire goes out.
Oxygen, fuel, heat. (remove any one of these three and your fire will go out)
Fire can "go away" if it runs out of fuel, is extinguished by water or another fire retardant, or if the conditions necessary for it to exist, such as heat, oxygen, and fuel, are removed. The extinguishing method depends on the type of fire and its surroundings.
we use a fire extinguisher ,fire blanket ,sand
Fires require heat, oxygen, fuel and chemical reaction. Remove any of these and the fire will go out.
take away all the fuel around the fire. this wont put it out but the fire will stop when it burns up the rest of the fuel
To remove fuel from a fire, you can try smothering the fire by covering it with a non-flammable material like a fire blanket or sand. Alternatively, you can use a fire extinguisher to spray a substance that will cut off the fire's oxygen supply. It is important to exercise caution and ensure your safety while attempting to remove fuel from a fire.
Fire goes out when one or more elements of the fire triangle (heat, fuel, oxygen) are removed. This can happen through extinguishing methods like smothering the fire to remove oxygen, cooling the flames to reduce heat, or removing the fuel source to starve the fire.
keep the o2 and the fuel separated
Remove the heat, oxygen or fuel.
When you remove fuel and oxygen from a fire, the fire will be extinguished. Fire requires fuel (such as wood or gas) and oxygen to continue burning, so removing either one will stop the combustion process.
you just go to the moon for more fuel