Flammable solids are classified as a type of hazardous material under the United Nations' classification system, specifically in the "Class 4" category. This class includes materials that can ignite easily and may pose a fire hazard during transport and storage. Examples of flammable solids include certain metals, powders, and organic materials like certain types of plastics and wood. Proper handling and storage protocols are essential to minimize fire risks associated with these substances.
Flammable solids are DOT Class 4.1 .
Flammable solids are DOT Class 4.1 .
Division 4.1 is for flammable solids.
Hazard class 4 is Flammable Solids.
division 4.1 is flammable solids
Hazard Class 4 (flammable solids) consists of:Division 4.1 - flammable solidsDivision 4.2 - spontaneously combustible materialDivision 4.3 - dangerous when wet material
It's NOT class A - which is flammable solids. Electrical fires are class C (burning liquids are class B, burning metals are class D)
DOT division 4.1 is for flammable solids.
Class A extinguishers are designed for "ordinary flammable materials" (organic solids such as paper and wood) but not liquids like gasoline, grease, electrical fires, or flammable metals.
A hazardous material that is a flammable solid is classified in Division 4.1
Class 4 Division 1 (more properly called Division 4.1) is for flammable solids.
Class 4 division 1 (more properly called Division 4.1) is for flammable solids.