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#21
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![]() There are a few Aqueous Fire Fighting Foams (AFFF not sure if that is a recognized acronym or just Sales Hype)systems out there now to replace Halon in Auto Racing applications, has anyones heard whether one of these might be a viable alternative? Mike Butler A triple F is wonderful stuff. I've trained with it for fighting underground mine fires. Since it's mostly water an extinguisher big enough to do any good would be very heavy. probably not the best choice for an on board extinguisher. |
#22
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Drew Dalgleish wrote:
A triple F is wonderful stuff. I've trained with it for fighting underground mine fires. Since it's mostly water an extinguisher big enough to do any good would be very heavy. probably not the best choice for an on board extinguisher. From what I can tell in the auto racing catalogs (Pegasus for one, http://s2.pegasusautoracing.com/026.pdf), there are systems from 2 to 4 liters weighing about 7 and 16 lbs respectively. These are being marketed as direct replacements for the 5 and 10lb Halon systems. I realize it is much easier to get out of a burning race car even if it is doing 160 mph or better than almost any airplane but the systems look interesting. Most open wheel cars I used to run use the 5lb Halon systems to meet the SCCA rules. Even with the larger 4L system it seems to me the 16 or so pounds might buy some very valuable time in an airplane. Mike Butler |
#23
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"Drew Dalgleish" wrote in message
... There are a few Aqueous Fire Fighting Foams (AFFF not sure if that is a recognized acronym or just Sales Hype)systems out there now to replace Halon in Auto Racing applications, has anyones heard whether one of these might be a viable alternative? Mike Butler A triple F is wonderful stuff. I've trained with it for fighting underground mine fires. Since it's mostly water an extinguisher big enough to do any good would be very heavy. probably not the best choice for an on board extinguisher. You are right on, Drew! That stuff rocks. I couldn't think of the term right away. When a bunch of us let a drill fire get away down at Boeing Field one time, we fought it with a couple of 2-1/2 lines for about twenty minutes. When it became apparent we were over our head, Boeing's Attack rig hit it with a ten-second burst of AFFF. It went out, NOW. The driver leaned out the door with his hanky and wiped the last drip or two off the nozzle. Man, that takes me back. . . Rich S. P.S. It's Aqueous Film Forming Foams. |
#24
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On Tue, 19 Jul 2005 15:11:53 GMT, "Cy Galley"
wrote: the key statement is... "It is likely impossible under an aircraft cowling when the plane is moving. " For this application it is a waste of weight, money, and time. I remember a "discovery" or "military weapons" show I watched one time where they were attempting to find a substitute for the Halon based fire extinguishing system being used on some military jet. They demonstrated the ability of the Halon system to put out a fire created by a 20mm cannon hit, under controlled conditions. The conditions included being in a wind tunnel, or directing high speed air onto the area to be hit to simulate relatively high speed flight. The Halon based system did a pretty good job of snuffing the fire out from the cannon shell hit, even while the flame was being fanned by the high speed air. Must have been a lot of Halon, I guess. None of the other types of systems shown seemed to work quite so well. This all came to be because Halon is a CFC, as is the refrigerant R-12. They are both similar inert gasses. I recall a demonstration one time wherein this guy breathed in from a hose of R-12, and then breathed out over a lit candle. The R-12 settled over the flame and extinguished it. As a mechanic back in the 70's, we used to discharge that stuff all over the place. It didn't matter we were told, it was an inert gas... Corky Scott |
#25
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Thanks for the feedback to all.
We're now off to Oshkosh, with a detour over northern NY, then off to Oshkosh via Chicago. Cheers. Airventure ... the world's biggest aviation toy store :-) |
#26
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![]() Corky Scott wrote: This all came to be because Halon is a CFC, as is the refrigerant R-12. They are both similar inert gasses. They ARE very stable, but not 'inert gasses'. Historically 'inert gasses' were a handful of chemical elements, that in their natural state at room temperature were monatomic gasses, and which would not form any chemical compounds under any conditions. Sometime after the mid 20th century some shortlived compounds of Neon (and maybe some others) were formed under laboratory conditions. Consequently, the proper term for these gasses was changed to 'noble' gasses, meaning the were reluctant to combine with other elements, but not completely inert. AFAIK 'inert gas' remains as an archaic term synominous with 'noble gas'. ... It didn't matter we were told, it was an inert gas... I think welders use the term 'inert gas' for any gas that will not ready with the metal they are welding by whatever technique they are using. But CFCs/Freons never qualified as 'inert' even by that defintion. Oh well, such is the nature of slang. I remember the screens used to support a beaker over a bunsen burner. they had a disc of asbestos in the middle so the flame would not burn through the wire. Bet those were a great source of airborne asbestos fibers. -- FF |
#27
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#28
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![]() "Teamfcar" wrote Even with the larger 4L system it seems to me the 16 or so pounds might buy some very valuable time in an airplane. Where would you chose to have the system protecting, the cockpit or under the cowl, and why? -- Jim in NC |
#29
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Morgans wrote:
"Teamfcar" wrote Even with the larger 4L system it seems to me the 16 or so pounds might buy some very valuable time in an airplane. Where would you chose to have the system protecting, the cockpit or under the cowl, and why? I cannot make a qualified answer for aircraft, but the SCCA requires one nozzle for the engine bay and another for the Driver in the cockpit. A 5 lb Halon will go for 30 or 40 seconds from two nozzles In the engine bay we usually aimed it at the carburetors (Dual Webers side drafts or Fuel Injection) such that it would end up down on the oil pumps. As it was explained to me the two most flammable things in the engine are the fuel and the oil. In the cockpit it was right behind the dash aimed down and back to cover the drivers legs and flow back up his torso. In most cases in open wheel racing, the fuel cell either forms the back of the seat or is nested to the back of the drivers seat. So that would be the most likely source to feed any flames in the cockpit. In an aircraft I would probably use the same ideas to allow the prevailing air stream carry the AFFF or Halon to the likely site of the flames. Mike Butler |
#30
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![]() Corky Scott wrote: ... I was just impressed that anyone would inhale the stuff. I'm impressed also, and not favorably. Although CFC refrigerant itself is non-toxic, like air from a shop compressor it usually contains trace contamination by lubricants making it dangerous to inhale. Ditto for helium sold to inflate balloons. Sure, you can make your voice sound funny but you can get chemical pnemonia too. -- FF |
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