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What is your fire doing

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Fog pattern = massive surface area in the droplets of water. Do you want to fog the overhead? ... http://longbeach.granicus.com/MediaPlayer.php?publish_id=89 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What is your fire doing


1
What is your fire doing?
  • What is it going to do??

2
Flames are easy
  • SMOKE tells the story!

3
Why Read Smoke?
  • To determine how much fire
  • To determine the location of the fire
  • To help predict collapse potential
  • To help PRIORITIZE Strategies Tactics
  • To PROTECT Firefighters from a HOSTILE FIRE
    EVENT

4
What do the following things tell you about the
conditions?
  • Volume of smoke
  • Velocity of the smoke
  • Density of the smoke
  • Color of the smoke

5
Lets talk flashover
6
An explanation
  • Normally flashover is the culmination of the fire
    growth phase and occurs whenthe ceiling
    temperature reaches around 900-1000F depending
    on the materials present in the compartment and
    the geometric arrangement.
  • After flashover, room temperature rapidly
    increases to reach up to 1900F.

7
'the rapid transition to a state of total surface
involvement in a fire of combustible materials
within a compartment'.
8
Indicators
  • Flames in the overhead
  • Rollover
  • Very high temperature which
  • forces you to crouch low
  • Smoke layer is banking down

9
IndicatorsWhat do we do about em?
  • Check the overhead!
  • Cool the overhead!
  • Ventilate!

10
Check the overhead
  • Upon entering a structure, use your TIC to
    determine if there is fire/heat in the overhead.
    (remember, a TIC reads surface temperature, not
    ambient temp.)
  • Upon advancing through the structure, scan your
    surroundings with your TIC (6 sided look)

11
Check the overhead
  • Upon entering the structure
  • Pop the ceiling and take a look!

12
  • You are in a box that is filling up with
    superheated gases and smoke.
  • The smoke is dense, black, and pressurized
    causing a low visibility environment.
  • You see flames dancing in the smoke
  • What do you do?

13
Cool the overhead
  • Have you heard of Pencil the ceiling? Of course
    you have!
  • The idea is to give a short burst of water into
    the overhead to allow absorption of heat, thus
    reducing the temperature in the overhead.

14
Cool the overhead
  • We apply shorts bursts to avoid disrupting the
    thermal balance.
  • The more surface area of water contained in your
    short burst that is introduced to the
    superheated atmosphere, the more heat it will
    absorb.

15
Cool the overhead
  • Straight stream little surface area
  • Fog pattern massive surface area in the
    droplets of water.
  • Do you want to fog the overhead?

16
NO!
  • If you would like to avoid getting burned, stay
    away from the wide fog pattern in the superheated
    overhead.
  • Instead
  • Apply your straight stream into the overhead for
    penetration into the room and to allow the stream
    to break up into smaller particles as it deflects
    off the ceiling.

17
Ventilate
  • What better way to release the heat than
    (properly) opening the box?

18
What is this smoke telling you?
19
The story has been told!
20
Black Fire is the term we give to High Volume,
High Velocity, Extremely Dense, Black Smoke.It
is the sure sign of impending flashover VENT
COOL are your primary choices.
21
Rollover
  • .An event that is typically seen to precede
    flashover by a few seconds
  • (Cool the Overhead)

22
Access the following video for footage of rollover
  • http//longbeach.granicus.com/MediaPlayer.php?publ
    ish_id89

23
A moderate volume of grey/brown smoke under
moderate pressure.
  • Grey / Brown smoke
  • The carbon particles have been filtered and
    dropped as the smoke travels away from the fire
    and through the structure.
  • Flashover not likely here.

24
A moderate volume of black smoke under moderate
pressure.
  • The box is filling with gases and heat.
  • Probably not impending flashover, but we need to
    change these conditions soon.

25
Flames visible with a high volume of pressurized
dense, black smoke
  • Flashover conditions likely from the corner
    apartment.
  • What would you do?

26
Non pressurized light colored smoke.
  • Pay attention, watch for changing conditions as
    you advance in your operations.

27
Nothing is absolute!
  • Pay attention to changing conditions.
  • Are you experiencing improving conditions or
    degrading conditions?
  • Look past the flames to read the story and
    predict what is likely to happen next.

28
Zone 3 Training
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