Fire extinguisher explained

A fire extinguisher is a handheld active fire protection device usually filled with a dry or wet chemical used to extinguish or control small fires, often in emergencies. It is not intended for use on an out-of-control fire, such as one which has reached the ceiling, endangers the user (i.e., no escape route, smoke, explosion hazard, etc.), or otherwise requires the equipment, personnel, resources or expertise of a fire brigade. Typically, a fire extinguisher consists of a hand-held cylindrical pressure vessel containing an agent that can be discharged to extinguish a fire. Fire extinguishers manufactured with non-cylindrical pressure vessels also exist but are less common.

There are two main types of fire extinguishers: stored-pressure and cartridge-operated. In stored pressure units, the expellant is stored in the same chamber as the firefighting agent itself. Depending on the agent used, different propellants are used. With dry chemical extinguishers, nitrogen is typically used; water and foam extinguishers typically use air. Stored pressure fire extinguishers are the most common type. Cartridge-operated extinguishers contain the expellant gas in a separate cartridge that is punctured before discharge, exposing the propellant to the extinguishing agent. This type is not as common, used primarily in areas such as industrial facilities, where they receive higher-than-average use. They have the advantage of simple and prompt recharge, allowing an operator to discharge the extinguisher, recharge it, and return to the fire in a reasonable amount of time. Unlike stored pressure types, these extinguishers use compressed carbon dioxide instead of nitrogen, although nitrogen cartridges are used on low-temperature (–60 rated) models. Cartridge-operated extinguishers are available in dry chemical and dry powder types in the U.S. and water, wetting agent, foam, dry chemical (classes ABC and B.C.), and dry powder (class D) types in the rest of the world.

Fire extinguishers are further divided into handheld and cart-mounted (also called wheeled extinguishers). Handheld extinguishers weigh from 0.5kgto14kgkg (01.1lbto31lbkg), and are hence, easily portable by hand. Cart-mounted units typically weigh more than 23kg (51lb). These wheeled models are most commonly found at construction sites, airport runways, heliports, as well as docks and marinas.

History

The first fire extinguisher of which there is any record was patented in England in 1723 by Ambrose Godfrey, a celebrated chemist at that time. It consisted of a cask of fire-extinguishing liquid containing a pewter chamber of gunpowder. This was connected with a system of fuses which were ignited, exploding the gunpowder and scattering the solution. This device was probably used to a limited extent, as Bradley's Weekly Messenger for November 7, 1729, refers to its efficiency in stopping a fire in London.

A portable pressurised fire extinguisher, the 'Extincteur' was invented by British Captain George William Manby and demonstrated in 1816 to the 'Commissioners for the affairs of Barracks'; it consisted of a copper vessel of 3 gallons (13.6 liters) of pearl ash (potassium carbonate) solution contained within compressed air. When operated it expelled liquid onto the fire.[1] [2]

Thomas J. Martin, an American inventor, was awarded a patent for an improvement in the Fire Extinguishers on March 26, 1872. His invention is listed in the U. S. Patent Office in Washington, DC under patent number 125,603.

The soda-acid extinguisher was first patented in 1866 by Francois Carlier of France, which mixed a solution of water and sodium bicarbonate with tartaric acid, producing the propellant carbon dioxide gas. A soda-acid extinguisher was patented in the U.S. in 1880 by Almon M. Granger. His extinguisher used the reaction between sodium bicarbonate solution and sulfuric acid to expel pressurized water onto a fire. A vial of concentrated sulfuric acid was suspended in the cylinder. Depending on the type of extinguisher, the vial of acid could be broken in one of two ways. One used a plunger to break the acid vial, while the second released a lead stopple that held the vial closed. Once the acid was mixed with the bicarbonate solution, carbon dioxide gas was expelled and thereby pressurized the water. The pressurized water was forced from the canister through a nozzle or short length of hose.

The cartridge-operated extinguisher was invented by Read & Campbell of England in 1881, which used water or water-based solutions. They later invented a carbon tetrachloride model called the "Petrolex" which was marketed toward automotive use.[3]

The chemical foam extinguisher was invented in 1904 by Aleksandr Loran in Russia, based on his previous invention of fire fighting foam. Loran first used it to extinguish a pan of burning naphtha.[4] It worked and looked similar to the soda-acid type, but the inner parts were slightly different. The main tank contained a solution of sodium bicarbonate in water, whilst the inner container (somewhat larger than the equivalent in a soda-acid unit) contained a solution of aluminium sulphate. When the solutions were mixed, usually by inverting the unit, the two liquids reacted to create a frothy foam, and carbon dioxide gas. The gas expelled the foam in the form of a jet. Although liquorice-root extracts and similar compounds were used as additives (stabilizing the foam by reinforcing the bubble-walls), there was no "foam compound" in these units. The foam was a combination of the products of the chemical reactions: sodium and aluminium salt-gels inflated by the carbon dioxide. Because of this, the foam was discharged directly from the unit, with no need for an aspirating branchpipe (as in newer mechanical foam types). Special versions were made for rough service, and vehicle mounting, known as apparatus of fire department types. Key features were a screw-down stopper that kept the liquids from mixing until it was manually opened, carrying straps, a longer hose, and a shut-off nozzle. Fire department types were often private label versions of major brands, sold by apparatus manufacturers to match their vehicles. Examples are Pirsch, Ward LaFrance, Mack, Seagrave, etc. These types are some of the most collectable extinguishers as they cross into both the apparatus restoration and fire extinguisher areas of interest.

In 1910, The Pyrene Manufacturing Company of Delaware filed a patent for using carbon tetrachloride (CTC, or CCl4) to extinguish fires.[5] The liquid vaporized and extinguished the flames by inhibiting the chemical chain reaction of the combustion process (it was an early 20th-century presupposition that the fire suppression ability of carbon tetrachloride relied on oxygen removal). In 1911, they patented a small, portable extinguisher that used the chemical.[6] This consisted of a brass or chrome container with an integrated handpump, which was used to expel a jet of liquid towards the fire. It was usually of 1impqt or capacity but was also available in up to 2impgal size. As the container was unpressurized, it could be refilled after use through a filling plug with a fresh supply of CTC.[7]

Another type of carbon tetrachloride extinguisher was the fire grenade. This consisted of a glass sphere filled with CTC, that was intended to be hurled at the base of a fire (early ones used salt-water, but CTC was more effective). Carbon tetrachloride was suitable for liquid and electrical fires and the extinguishers were fitted to motor vehicles. Carbon tetrachloride extinguishers were withdrawn in the 1950s because of the chemical's toxicity – exposure to high concentrations damages the nervous system and internal organs. Additionally, when used on a fire, the heat can convert CTC to phosgene gas,[8] formerly used as a chemical weapon.

The carbon dioxide extinguisher was invented (at least in the US) by the Walter Kidde Company in 1924 in response to Bell Telephone's request for an electrically non-conductive chemical for extinguishing the previously difficult-to-extinguish fires in telephone switchboards. It consisted of a tall metal cylinder containing 7.5lb of with a wheel valve and a woven brass, cotton-covered hose, with a composite funnel-like horn as a nozzle.[9] is still popular today as it is an ozone-friendly clean agent and is used heavily in film and television production to extinguish burning stuntmen.[10] Carbon dioxide extinguishes fire mainly by displacing oxygen. It was once thought that it worked by cooling, although this effect on most fires is negligible. An anecdotal report of a carbon dioxide fire extinguisher was published in Scientific American in 1887 which describes the case of a basement fire at a Louisville, Kentucky pharmacy which melted a lead pipe charge with (called carbonic acid gas at the time) intended for a soda fountain which immediately extinguished the flames thus saving the building.[11] Also in 1887, carbonic acid gas was described as a fire extinguisher for engine chemical fires at sea and ashore.[12]

In 1928, DuGas (later bought by ANSUL) came out with a cartridge-operated dry chemical extinguisher, which used sodium bicarbonate specially treated with chemicals to render it free-flowing and moisture-resistant. It consisted of a copper cylinder with an internal cartridge. The operator turned a wheel valve on top to puncture the cartridge and squeezed a lever on the valve at the end of the hose to discharge the chemical. This was the first agent available for large-scale three-dimensional liquid and pressurized gas fires, but remained largely a specialty type until the 1950s, when small dry chemical units were marketed for home use. ABC dry chemical came over from Europe in the 1950s, with Super-K being invented in the early 1960s and Purple-K being developed by the United States Navy in the late 1960s. Manually applied dry agents such as graphite for class D (metal) fires had existed since World War II, but it was not until 1949 that Ansul introduced a pressurized extinguisher using an external cartridge to discharge the agent. Met-L-X (sodium chloride) was the first extinguisher developed in the US, with graphite, copper, and several other types being developed later.

In the 1940s, Germany invented the liquid chlorobromomethane (CBM) for use in aircraft. It was more effective and slightly less toxic than carbon tetrachloride and was used until 1969. Methyl bromide was discovered as an extinguishing agent in the 1920s and was used extensively in Europe. It is a low-pressure gas that works by inhibiting the chain reaction of the fire and is the most toxic of the vaporizing liquids, used until the 1960s. The vapor and combustion by-products of all vaporizing liquids were highly toxic and could cause death in confined spaces.

In the 1970s, Halon 1211 came over to the United States from Europe where it had been used since the late 1940s or early 1950s. Halon 1301 had been developed by DuPont and the United States Army in 1954. Both 1211 and 1301 work by inhibiting the chain reaction of the fire, and in the case of Halon 1211, cooling class A fuels as well. Halon is still in use today but is falling out of favor for many uses due to its environmental impact. Europe and Australia have severely restricted its use, since the Montreal Protocol of 1987. Less severe restrictions have been implemented in the United States, the Middle East, and Asia.[13] [14]

Classification

Internationally there are several accepted classification methods for hand-held fire extinguisher. Each classification is useful in fighting fires with a particular group of fuel.

Australia and New Zealand

Specifications of fire extinguishers are set out in the standard AS/NZS 1841, the most recent version being released in 2007. All fire extinguishers must be painted signal red. Except for water extinguishers, each extinguisher has a coloured band near the top, covering at least 10% of the extinguisher's body length, specifying its contents.

TypeBand colourFire classes (brackets denote sometimes applicable)
A B C D E F
Water Signal red
Wet chemical Oatmeal
Ultramarine blue
Dry chemical White
Dry powder (metal fires) Lime green
Carbon dioxide Black
Vaporizing liquid (non-halon clean agents) Golden yellow

Due to the ozone-depleting nature of halon, in Australia yellow (Halon) fire extinguishers are illegal to own or use on a fire, unless an essential use exemption has been granted.[15]

United Kingdom

According to the standard BS EN 3, fire extinguishers in the United Kingdom as all throughout Europe are red RAL 3000, and a band or circle of a second color covering between 5–10% of the surface area of the extinguisher indicates the contents. Before 1997, the entire body of the fire extinguisher was color coded according to the type of extinguishing agent.

The UK recognises six fire classes:[16]

Class E has been discontinued, but covered fires involving electrical appliances. This is no longer used on the basis that, when the power supply is turned off, an electrical fire can fall into any of the remaining five categories.

TypeOld code<-- Colours below to BS 381 -->BS EN 3 colour codeFire classes
(brackets denote sometimes applicable)[17]
A B C D E F
WaterSignal red Signal red
FoamCream Red with a cream panel above the operating instructions
Dry powderFrench blue Red with a blue panel above the operating instructions
Carbon dioxide, CO2Black Red with a black panel above the operating instructions
Wet chemicalYellow (not in use) Red with a canary yellow panel above the operating instructions
Class D powderFrench blue Red with a blue panel above the operating instructions
Halon 1211/BCFEmerald green

In the UK, the use of Halon gas is now prohibited except under certain situations such as on aircraft and in the military and police.[18]

Fire extinguishing performance per fire class is displayed using numbers and letters such as 13A, 55B.

EN3 does not recognise a separate electrical class – however there is an additional feature requiring special testing (35 kV dielectric test per EN 3-7:2004). A powder or CO2 extinguisher will bear an electrical pictogramme as standard signifying that it can be used on live electrical fires (given the symbol E in the table). If a water-based extinguisher has passed the 35 kV test it will also bear the same electrical pictogramme – however, any water-based extinguisher is only recommended for inadvertent use on electrical fires.

United States

There is no official standard in the United States for the color of fire extinguishers, though they are usually red, except for class D extinguishers which are usually yellow, water and Class K wet chemical extinguishers which are usually silver, and water mist extinguishers which are usually white. Extinguishers are marked with pictograms depicting the types of fires that the extinguisher is approved to fight. In the past, extinguishers were marked with colored geometric symbols, and some extinguishers still use both symbols. The types of fires and additional standards are described in NFPA 10: Standard for Portable Fire Extinguishers, 2013 edition.

Fire class Geometric symbol Pictogram Mnemonic
A Ordinary solid combustibles A for "Ash"
B Flammable liquids and gases B for "Barrel"
C Energized electrical equipment C for "Current"
D Combustible metals D for "Dynamite"
K Oils and fats K for "Kitchen"

Fire extinguishing capacity is rated in accordance with ANSI/UL 711: Rating and Fire Testing of Fire Extinguishers. The ratings are described using numbers preceding the class letter, such as 1-A:10-B:C. The number preceding the A multiplied by 1.25 gives the equivalent extinguishing capability in gallons of water. The number preceding the B indicates the size of fire in square feet that an ordinary user should be able to extinguish. There is no additional rating for class C, as it only indicates that the extinguishing agent will not conduct electricity, and an extinguisher will never have a rating of just C.

Comparison of fire classes
AmericanEuropeanUKAustralian/AsianFuel/heat source
Class AClass AClass AClass AOrdinary combustibles
Class BClass BClass BClass BFlammable liquids
Class CClass CClass CFlammable gases
Class CClass EElectrical equipment
Class DClass DClass DClass DCombustible metals
Class KClass FClass FClass FCooking oil or fat

Installation

Fire extinguishers are usually fitted in buildings at an easily accessible location, such as against a wall in a high-traffic area. They are also often fitted to motor vehicles, watercraft, and aircraft – this is required by law in many jurisdictions, for identified classes of vehicles. Under NFPA 10 all commercial vehicles must carry at least one fire extinguisher, with size/UL rating depending on type of vehicle and cargo (i.e., fuel tankers usually must have a 20lb, while most others can carry a 5lb). The revised NFPA 10 created criteria on the placement of "fast flow extinguishers" in locations such as those storing and transporting pressurized flammable liquids and pressurized flammable gas or areas with possibility of three-dimensional class B hazards are required to have "fast flow extinguishers" as required by NFPA 5.5.1.1. Varying classes of competition vehicles require fire extinguishing systems, the simplest requirements being a 1A:10BC hand-held portable extinguisher mounted to the interior of the vehicle.The height limit for installation, as determined by the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), is 60inches for fire extinguishers weighing less than 40lb. However, compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) also needs to be followed within the United States. The ADA height limit of the fire extinguisher, as measured at the handle, is 48inches. Fire extinguisher installations are also limited to protruding no more than 4 inches into the adjacent path of travel. The ADA rule states that any object adjacent to a path of travel may not project more than 4inches if the object's bottom leading edge is higher than 27inches. The 4-inch protrusion rule was designed to protect people with low-vision and those who are blind. The height limit rule of 48 inches is primarily related to access by people with wheelchairs but it is also related to other disabilities as well. Prior to 2012, the height limit was 54inches for side-reach by wheelchair-accessible installations. Installations made prior to 2012 at the 54-inch height are not required to be changed.

In New Zealand, the mandatory installation of fire extinguishers in vehicles is limited to self-propelled plant in agriculture and arboriculture, passenger service vehicles with more than 12 seats and vehicles that carry flammable goods.[19] NZ Transport Agency recommends[20] that all company vehicles carry a fire extinguisher, including passenger cars.

Fire extinguishers mounted inside aircraft engines are called extinguishing bottles or fire bottles.[21]

Types of extinguishing agents

Different types of extinguishing agents have different modes of action, and certain ones are only appropriate for specific fire classes.

Dry chemical

This is a powder-based agent that extinguishes by separating the three parts of the fire triangle. It prevents the chemical reactions involving heat, fuel, and oxygen, thus extinguishing the fire. During combustion, the fuel breaks down into free radicals, which are highly reactive fragments of molecules that react with oxygen. The substances in dry chemical extinguishers can stop this process.

Foams

Applied to fuel fires as either an aspirated (mixed and expanded with air in a branch pipe) or nonaspirated form to create a frothy blanket or seal over the fuel, preventing oxygen reaching it. Unlike powder, foam can be used to progressively extinguish fires without flashback.

Water types

Water cools burning carbonaceous material and is very effective against fires in furniture, fabrics, etc. (including deep-seated fires). Water-based extinguishers cannot be used safely on energized electrical fires or flammable liquid fires.[25]

Additives can be used to alter the properties of water extinguishers, though additives not specified by the manufacturer will void the extinguisher’s listing. These include:

Wet chemical types

Wet chemical (potassium acetate, potassium carbonate, or potassium citrate) extinguishes the fire by forming an air-excluding soapy foam blanket over the burning oil through the chemical process of saponification (a base reacting with a fat to form a soap) and by the water content cooling the oil below its ignition temperature. Generally, class A and K (F in Europe) only, although older models also achieved class B and C fire-fighting capability in the past, current models are rated A:K (Amerex, Ansul, Buckeye and Strike First) or K only (Badger/Kidde).

Clean agents

Clean agents extinguish fire by displacing oxygen (CO2 or inert gases), removing heat from the combustion zone (Halotron I, FE-36, Novec 1230) or inhibiting the chemical chain reaction (Halons, Halotron BrX). They are referred to as clean agents because they do not leave any residue after discharge, which is ideal for protecting sensitive electronics, aircraft, armored vehicles and archival storage, museums, and valuable documents.

Dry powder and metal fire extinguishers

There are several class D fire extinguisher agents available; some will handle multiple types of metals, others will not.

Most class D extinguishers will have a special low-velocity nozzle or discharge wand to gently apply the agent in large volumes to avoid disrupting any finely divided burning materials. Agents are also available in bulk and can be applied with a scoop or shovel.

Fire extinguishing ball

Several modern "ball" or grenade-style extinguishers are available on the market. The modern version of the ball is a hard foam shell, wrapped in fuses that lead to a small black powder charge within. The ball bursts shortly after contact with flame, dispersing a cloud of ABC dry chemical powder which extinguishes the fire. The coverage area is about 5m2. One benefit of this type is that it may be used for passive suppression. The ball can be placed in a fire-prone area and will deploy automatically if a fire develops, being triggered by heat. They may also be manually operated by rolling or tossing into a fire. Most modern extinguishers of this type are designed to make a loud noise upon deployment.[38]

This technology is not new, however. From about 1880 glass "fire grenades" filled with a weak solution of common salt and ammonium chloride in water were popular. The addition of the salts was to prevent freezing, with ammonium chloride thought to be more effective in extinguishing flame. They were deployed by hurling them at the base of the fire. Containing only about 1imppt they were of limited use. Some later brands, such as Red Comet, were designed for passive operation and included a special holder with a spring-loaded trigger that would break the glass ball when a fusible link melted, or were sealed with wax to melt in contact with flame and release the contents. As was typical of this era, some glass extinguishers contained the toxic (but effective) carbon tetrachloride. These glass fire grenade bottles are sought after by collectors.[39] [40]

Condensed aerosol fire suppression

Condensed aerosol fire suppression is a particle-based form of fire extinction similar to gaseous fire suppression or dry chemical fire extinction. As with gaseous fire suppressants, condensed aerosol suppressants use clean agents to suppress the fire. The agent can be delivered by means of mechanical operation, electric operation, or combined electro-mechanical operation. To the difference of gaseous suppressants, which emit only gas, and dry chemical extinguishers, which release powder-like particles of a large size (25–150 μm) condensed aerosols are defined by the National Fire Protection Association as releasing finely divided solid particles (generally <10 μm), usually in addition to gas.[41]

Whereas dry chemical systems must be directly aimed at the flame, condensed aerosols are flooding agents and therefore effective regardless of the location and height of the fire. Wet chemical systems, such as the kind generally found in foam extinguishers, must, similarly to dry chemical systems, be sprayed directionally, onto the fire. Additionally, wet chemicals (such as potassium carbonate) are dissolved in water, whereas the agents used in condensed aerosols are microscopic solids.

Experimental techniques

In 2015, researchers from George Mason University announced that high volume sound with low bass frequencies in the 30 to 60 hertz range drives oxygen away from the combustion surface, extinguishing the fire, a principle was previously tested by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).[42] One proposed application is to extinguish fires in outer space, with none of the clean-up required for mass-based systems.[43]

Another proposed solution for fire extinguishers in space is a vacuum cleaner that extracts the combustible materials.[44]

Maintenance

Most countries in the world require regular fire extinguisher maintenance by a competent person to operate safely and effectively, as part of fire safety legislation. Lack of maintenance can lead to an extinguisher not discharging when required, or rupturing when pressurized. Deaths have occurred, even in recent times, from corroded extinguishers exploding.

In the United States, state and local fire codes, as well as those established by federal agencies such as the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, are generally consistent with standards established by the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA).[45] They commonly require, for fire extinguishers in all buildings other than single-family dwellings, inspections every 30 days to ensure the unit is pressurized and unobstructed (done by an employee of the facility) and an annual inspection and service by a qualified technician. Some jurisdictions require more frequent service. The servicer places a tag on the extinguisher to indicate the type of service performed (annual inspection, recharge, new fire extinguisher). Hydrostatic pressure testing for all types of extinguishers is also required, generally every five years for water and CO2 models up to every 12 years for dry chemical models.

Recently the NFPA and ICC voted to allow for the elimination of the 30-day inspection requirement so long as the fire extinguisher is monitored electronically. According to NFPA, the system must provide record keeping in the form of an electronic event log at the control panel. The system must also constantly monitor an extinguisher's physical presence, internal pressure and whether an obstruction exists that could prevent ready access. In the event that any of the above conditions are found, the system must send an alert to officials so they can immediately rectify the situation. Electronic monitoring can be wired or wireless.

In the UK, three types of maintenance are required:

In the United States, there are three types of service:

In open public spaces, extinguishers are ideally kept inside cabinets that have glass that must be broken to access the extinguisher, or which emit an alarm siren that cannot be shut off without a key, to alert people the extinguisher has been handled by an unauthorized person if a fire is not present. This also alerts maintenance to check an extinguisher for usage so that it may be replaced if it has been used.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Fire extinguishers: The unlikely origin story . Fire Rescue 1 . 21 November 2016 . 8 March 2021 . 18 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210418054310/https://www.firerescue1.com/fire-products/extinguishers/articles/fire-extinguishers-the-unlikely-origin-story-mr1p5NyHncUQE5Vy/ . dead .
  2. News: Miscellanea . Manchester Mercury . 26 March 1816 . 3.
  3. Web site: Staffordshire Past Track"Petrolex" half gallon fire extinguisher . 2009-05-25 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100122210938/http://www.search.staffspasttrack.org.uk/engine/resource/default.asp?resource=14547 . 2010-01-22 . dead .
  4. http://p-lab.org/publ/7-1-0-15 Loran and the fire extinguisher
  5. , filed April 5, 1910.
  6. , filed January 7, 1911.
  7. Web site: Vintage Fire Extinguishers . Pyrene Fire Extinguishers . 23 December 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100325160709/http://www.vintagefe.com/pyrene.html . 25 March 2010.
  8. Web site: IPCS International Programme on Chemical Safety. Carbon Tetrachloride Health and Safety Guide. 25 December 2009.
  9. , filed September 26, 1925.
  10. Book: McCarthy, Robert E . Secrets of Hollywood special effects . Google Books . 2010-03-17 . 978-0-240-80108-7 . 1992. Focal Press .
  11. Book: Scientific American. 1887-09-03. Munn & Company. 149.
  12. Book: Scientific American, "Improved Fire Extinguishing Apparatus For Vessels". 1877-06-23. Munn & Company. 383, 388.
  13. Web site: Ozone Depleting Substances . Government of the United Kingdom . 10 August 2023.
  14. Web site: Questions and Answers on Halons and Their Substitutes . https://web.archive.org/web/20150924132058/http://www.epa.gov/ozone/snap/fire/qa.html#qB11 . 2015-09-24 . §B.11 . 19 November 2016.
  15. Web site: Halon Disposal . Ozone Protection . . 2006-12-12 . https://web.archive.org/web/20060916083445/http://www.deh.gov.au/atmosphere/ozone/ods/halon/disposal.html . 2006-09-16 . dead .
  16. Web site: ExtinguisherServicingEverything you need to know. 19 November 2016. 25 November 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161125212835/http://www.extinguisheradvice.org.uk/types-of-fire-extinguisher.php. dead.
  17. Web site: Fire Extinguishers – Classes, Colour Coding, Rating, Location and Maintenance : Firesafe.org.uk. www.firesafe.org.uk.
  18. Web site: Disposal Of HalonEnvirowise . 2007-09-22 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081203133208/http://www.envirowise.gov.uk/Ref197 . 2008-12-03 . dead .
  19. Web site: Do you need to carry a fire extinguisher in a company vehicle?. August 27, 2018. Driving Tests.
  20. Web site: Your safe driving policy. 2018-09-03. 2019-01-23. https://web.archive.org/web/20190123224833/https://www.nzta.govt.nz/assets/resources/your-safe-driving-policy/docs/safe-driving-policy-booklet.pdf. dead.
  21. Web site: Aircraft Fire Extinguishing Systems . skybrary.aero . 10 August 2023.
  22. http://nwfireinc.com/main/msds/badger/msds02.pdf
  23. Web site: Wasserfilmbildendes Schaummittel – Extensid AFFF . 071027 intersales.info
  24. Web site: Cold Fire – Firefreeze . 2023-11-24 . en-US.
  25. Web site: Types of Fire Extinguishers . Futura Fire.
  26. Web site: Handheld Fire Extinguishers . 2012-04-09 .
  27. Web site: Options to the Use of Halons for Aircraft Fire Suppression Systems – 2012 Update . 11 . 2012-04-09 .
  28. Web site: Options to the Use of Halons for Aircraft Fire Suppression Systems2012 Update . xvii . 2012-04-09 .
  29. Web site: Chubb Fire Pyromet Powder Extinguisher . 2017-02-19 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170220094157/http://www.chubb.co.uk/Pages/Chubb_Fire_Pyromet_Powder_Extinguisher.aspx . 2017-02-20 . dead .
  30. , filed July 5, 1960. UK Patent GB884946.
  31. Web site: The Non Numismatic Bibliography of Dr L.H. Cope. 19 November 2016.
  32. Extinguishment of Alkali Metal Fires, S.J. Rodgers and W.A. Everson,Technical Documentary Report APL-TDR 64-114, Air Force Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio,1964, pp. 28–31.
  33. Fire Protection Handbook, Thirteenth Edition, National Fire Protection Association, Boston, 1969, Ch. 15, p. 54
  34. Web site: Aviation Boatswain's Mate 1 & C: Navy Training Courses. United States Bureau of Naval. Personnel. 1 January 1959. U.S. Government Printing Office. 19 November 2016. Google Books.
  35. Extinguishing Agent for Magnesium Fire: Phases I-IV . Naval Air Systems Command . July 1986 . 10 August 2023.
  36. JIOA Final Report 41. "German Chemical Fire Extinguishers", Joint Intelligence Objectives Agency, Smith, Carlisle F, Washington DC, October 1945.
  37. Web site: Fireade 2000 Applications . 2009-11-10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20091101175146/http://www.firesupplydepot.com/fireade-applications.html . 2009-11-01 . dead .
  38. Book: Chuck a ball to put out fire. 14 September 2007. Earth Times. 20 June 2009. 4 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304042931/http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/107481.html. dead.
  39. Web site: Walter . Sophie . The beauty and danger in Victorian Glass Fire Grenades . Museum Crush . 4 November 2020 . London Fire Brigade Museum . 29 March 2022.
  40. News: McCormick . David . Vintage Fire Grenades History and Value . 29 March 2022 . . 1 April 2021 . Boone, IA . 0161-8342.
  41. http://www.nfpa.org/assets/files/PDF/ROP/2010-A2005-ROP.pdf National Fire Protection Association
  42. Web site: Dousing flames with low-frequency sound waves. Physics World. 2 April 2015.
  43. News: Two students created a device that extinguishes fires with soundwaves. Conrad. Henry. March 25, 2015. ZME Science. March 25, 2015.
  44. Nakumura . Yuji . Novel Fire Extinguisher Method Using Vacuuming Force Applicable to Space Habitats . Fire Technology. 2020 . 56 . 361–384 . 10.1007/s10694-019-00854-4 . 145894079 .
  45. Web site: Charpentier . Will . NFPA Regulations on Fire Extinguishers . HomeSteady . Leaf Group . 23 June 2018.
  46. Web site: 1 March 2013. Common Myth #33. 28 September 2020. 5 October 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201005092706/https://amerex-fire.com/upl/downloads/library/33-you-need-to-turn-the-extinguisher-upside-down-and-hit-it-with-a-rubber-mallet-to-fluff-the-chemic.pdf. dead.