maxi77
Well-Known Member
Interesting that several fire accounts here the fire was finally killed by good old fashioned water. Having trained with water, CO2, Powder and foam, I personally do not rate powder very highly, though its the most common. Not only the mess it leaves which can be as bad as if not worse than that left by a small fire, but the 'white out' effect others mention. You cant see the seat of the fire, so you cant get the extinguishant to it. Its worse than useless just spraying the stuff around, unless you can get it on to the flames. You really do not want to breath the stuff either! A fundamental requirement of fire fighting is to getb the extinguishing material directoly to the seat of the fire - where it is actually burning. Just spraying vaguely at the flames will do no good - you have to get it on to the actual point where it is burning. In a powder white-out, you cant do that.
CO2 is good in a boat as you can get a good build up in a confined space, thus eliminating all the oxygen. However, there is a chance you will eliminate yourself as well unless you are careful, in a confined space like a boat cabin. Best if you can pump the boat full of CO2 from outside. Noisy - yes very. The blast can have the same effect on burning liquids as water thrown in a burning chip pan - simply scattering burning liquid all over. Not helpful.
Water - which is in plentiful supply round a boat, if you can reach it quickly seems almost as effective as anything on anything but a pool of burning liquid (e.g fuel, oil etc), and the accounts above tend to confirm that.
My preference as a general extinguishant is foam. not as messy as powder, and does not white out, so the operator can still see exactly what is happening. It doesnt risk blasting burning material away from the seat of the fire, and is effective
Final comment, how many extinguishers do you carry? The average Office extinguisher will last around 30 seconds. That's not long and is unlikely to put out a fire with flames more than 30cms high. That's roughly equivalent to a burning wastepaper basket. What do you do after 30 seconds if you only carry one extinguisher? MY fire safety people suggested carrying a minimum of 4kg of dry powder on a boat in at least two extinguishers, in case one fails. I often see one little 1kg dry powder as the sole means of fire fighting on boats. Its not enough! There is not enough powder or time in one of these for anything but the very smallest fire. As they say, in the boat there is no chance of 9 tons of fire engine turning up to rescue you before it gets out of control.
+1
I changed to mainly foam, and would have gone fully foam in time. When in the RN CO2 was reserved for electrical cabinets only with voltages above 100V. The only exception for this was CO2 flooding in SSNs in dock but this was replaced with foam flooding later as being more effective