Red
1. by colour coding i.e. red for water, black for CO2 2. By writing the content in large letters on the body of the extinguisher
Red...... i think
1. by colour coding i.e. red for water, black for CO2 2. By writing the content in large letters on the body of the extinguisher
1. by colour coding i.e. red for water, black for CO2 2. By writing the content in large letters on the body of the extinguisher
1. by colour coding i.e. red for water, black for CO2 2. By writing the content in large letters on the body of the extinguisher
A fire extinguisher is typically red, so it's easy to spot. It is marked with information identifying the type of extinguisher it is, such as dry powder or foam. It will also indicate the types of fires it is appropriate for.
A fire extinguisher is typically red, so it's easy to spot. It is marked with information identifying the type of extinguisher it is, such as dry powder or foam. It will also indicate the types of fires it is appropriate for.
Assuming this extinguisher is following Australian rules, that is a dry chemical extinguisher. If this is an American extinguisher, there are no standards, only conventions, and I couldn't tell you by color alone.
It might be red, but most are simply unpainted stainless steel with some labels attached. So, the best answer might be silver. It is red of course!
A nice working fire extinguisher. Ussually they are red and hanging some where in the house. The ABC rated or the CO2 fire extinguisher works. DO NOT USE WATER!!
Depending upon where you are, there is no standard color of fire extinguisher to determine what is inside; that would normally be shown on the label. In the USA a red extinguisher could be foam, dry chemical or even special Class D powders. On the label, various standards use different colors to indicate contents. Under British and Australian standards, solid red means "water" (Class A). Foam extinguishers would have either a blue stripe (AUS) or cream-colored panel above the instruction label (Brit).