Silver is a water can (Class A) or a Class K for grease fryers. Red is ABC extinguishers (multi-purpose) and for CO extinguishers. Yellow is for Class D (flammable metals).
As for Fire Extinguisher LABEL colours, that depends on what they contain, which determines which type of fires each type may be used to extinguish, thus:
a) Red (Water/Gas originally) - for solid fuel (i.e.wood/paper), fires - though this colour has now been adopted for other extinguishers.
b) Blue (Dry Powder) - for Wheel/Brake fires on aircraft.
c) Cream (Foam) - for liquid/fuel fires.
d) Black (Carbon Dioxide gas) - for electrical or fuel fires.
e) Green (Bromoclorodiflouromethane, or BCF) - for fuel/electrical fires.
The green type is no longer available in the UK for civilian use.
Red...... i think
Yes, a bedroom fire could be quickly extinguished if there were a fire extinguisher handy. There is no particular rule that requires an extinguisher in any sleeping area. Check with your local fire code administrators for more ideas about where is the best place to position a fire extinguisher in a residential occupancy.
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.
how does a fire extinguisher work
Yes, you can, but it would violate the fire code and common sense.
A Class C fire extinguisher.
A Class C fire extinguisher.
The color of a fire extinguisher next to a boiler is typically red, which is the standard color for fire extinguishers. However, the specific type of extinguisher used can vary based on the fire risks associated with boilers. For example, a Class B extinguisher (used for flammable liquids) may be red with a label indicating its specific use. Always check the labeling to ensure the right type is available for the potential hazards.
Fire extinguishers are marked by letter and color. These identify the contents of extinguisher (water, foam, wet chemical, e.g.), and fire classification.(paper and wood, combustible metals, e.g).
We are use the co2 as fire extinguisher
Fire extinguishers are not usually classified by color. They are classified by letters A, B, C, D and K. Electrical fires are a type C fire and require either a class C extinguisher or a ABC (known as a multi purpose) extinguisher.
fire extinguisher safety training Topic: Question Summary: Do I have to take a fire extinguisher class? Question Long-Form: I own a fire extinguisher. Am I required to take fire extinguisher training? If so, where are they offered?