Engine Room fire Protection

pandroid

Well-Known Member
Joined
16 Sep 2001
Messages
737
Location
UK
www.kissen.co.uk
A fire in the engine is the one thing that terrifies me (er, well, not the ONE thing...). The engine in my HR is in a compartment which is practically a room, and the only protection is a hole that you can poke the extinquisher through.

I've been looking at these posh SEA-FIRE extinquishers, and wondering whether they are worth it. They seem to be about 400 quid, which is quite a lot for an extinquisher, and if you go for all the works (engine cut-off etc) it works out at quite a lot, but at least they seem to be decent protection and the new filling isnt supposed to leave residues on the engine.

Anybody got any views about engine protection? I want something that goes off when I need it, and not before. Would it be critical where its fitted (i.e above the engine, alongside etc?)
 
If the type of extinguisher you are talking about is the replacement for Halo, then it's probably the best protection you can get. A reasonable sized one (ask the supplier) for your engine room. I mounted my old halon ones above the engines, as reccomended, thats where I'll fit the new ones, (eventually) it will be a long time, as long as my old ones are ok I'll keep them, yes I know I'm meant to dispose of them next year, yawn. But I promise I will eventually. Keep the hole to poke an extinguisher through just in case and fit a biggish powder one close by.
 
Is £400 really a lot of money when you consider the possible outcome if you don't spend it?

Do without something else, you can't put a price on safety IMHO

Martyn
 
What ever you do don't use powder as a first line defence, and certainly not as an automatic system, otherwise you will be a real sailing boat when the engine has ingested all that muck. Like Scottie - Ive got my halon, which I intend to keep and sod the law. I bought for £20 several large halon extinguishers from a local dealer.

Certainly the way you sugest is the ONLY way to go if you want to be safe and legal.
 
I've also been looking at engine fire protection - in my case for an engine box, rather than an engine room. Rather like the look of the Pyrogen system - www.pyrogen.com. Runs on Russian rocket fuel (no, not vodka), so I suppose it could double as emergency propulsion? Anyway, looks like a good system that can be tailored to individual requirements.
 
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