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Home > Technical > Fire Extinguisher |
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Dave Member Since: 04 Jul 2007 Location: Somewhere Near You Posts: 2666 |
Halfrauds used to sell them, but not sure if they still do as I ain't been in one for ages. ______________________
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23rd Mar 2009 9:17 pm |
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Dougden Member Since: 10 May 2008 Location: N W Kent Posts: 288 |
I bought this from the company I work for as we are all things security - And a bit of other stuff!!
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23rd Mar 2009 9:20 pm |
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markconnor33 Member Since: 16 Mar 2007 Location: Leeds, West Yorkshire Posts: 118 |
And always make sure Doug that you don't have a fire when the boots full Freelander 2
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23rd Mar 2009 10:23 pm |
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Bluemacs Member Since: 04 Feb 2009 Location: Mid Argyll Posts: 14 |
Aye, you don't want a fire when the boot's full of whisky/brandy.
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23rd Mar 2009 10:58 pm |
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markconnor33 Member Since: 16 Mar 2007 Location: Leeds, West Yorkshire Posts: 118 |
All the extinguishers I've seen for cars/home use tend to be dry powder, as it's pretty universal and suitable for use on virtually all fires.
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24th Mar 2009 10:54 am |
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anglaslt Member Since: 24 Dec 2008 Location: Vilnius, Lithuania Posts: 186 |
If you've got a Sainsburys Homebase nearby they normally have them in stock.
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24th Mar 2009 11:11 am |
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Neil Member Since: 02 Sep 2008 Location: Wiltshire /Gloucestershire borders Posts: 61 |
I am in the fire industry and have been teaching motorsport marshalls & teams in fighting car fires for 10 years. Anything smaller than a 1kg powder will do nothing for you, 2kg is best. This will only give you about 10-12 seconds of use and make sure it has a guage; most of the DIY domestic & supermarket ones dont. There are good & bad brands but I wont get into that here on the forum!
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24th Mar 2009 6:37 pm |
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chicken george Member Since: 05 Dec 2007 Location: N. Yorks Posts: 13289 |
I have used extinguishers twice , once on a brand new chicken shed with a wiring fault, I saved the shed but there was still a few £1000's worth of damage for the electricians insurance to worry about, And once on a borrowed forklift truck, my neighbour hadn't cleaned the accumulated dry straw from around the turbo for a while .
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24th Mar 2009 6:54 pm |
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Bill Turner Member Since: 08 Jul 2008 Location: Birkenhead Posts: 977 |
As someone else involved with motorsport can I add to what Neil has stated. If you do get yourself a 2kg minimum size extinguisher every so often (i do it before every event) remove it from the car, turn it upside down and shake it to make sure the powder is powder and has not been vibrated into a solid block by the movement of the car.
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26th Mar 2009 7:58 pm |
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avtur Member Since: 11 Nov 2006 Location: Stockport Posts: 1306 |
I regularly undergo live fire training, there is no substitute for fighting a 'real' fire.
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26th Mar 2009 8:57 pm |
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chicken george Member Since: 05 Dec 2007 Location: N. Yorks Posts: 13289 |
[quote=]"Bill Turner".
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27th Mar 2009 7:49 am |
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AndyC Member Since: 30 Nov 2007 Location: Where the snow dosen't melt when the sun is shining! Posts: 4165 |
[quote="chicken george
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27th Mar 2009 8:41 am |
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robheath Member Since: 01 Jul 2012 Location: reading Posts: 15 |
Is there a way to mount an extinguisher under the front of the drivers seat? The landrover extinguisher talks about a seat bracket? |
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3rd Jul 2012 9:32 pm |
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athelstan Member Since: 03 Nov 2009 Location: Reality Posts: 2658 |
We have a 2kg powder extinguisher with gauge.
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4th Jul 2012 6:27 am |
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