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  2. Firefighting foam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firefighting_foam

    In general, it is better than protein foam because its longer blanket life provides better safety when entry is required for rescue. Fluoroprotein foam has fast knockdown characteristics and it can also be used together with dry chemicals that destroy protein foam. In the mid-1960s, the US Navy developed aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF).

  3. Compressed air foam system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compressed_air_foam_system

    After testing a dry type 2 foam in several situations, Johnny Murdock notes, "The emerging consensus is that the dryer foams (type II; maybe type I) should be used to suppress vapors, protect unburned structures, build wildland fire lines involving unburned fuels; … and that structural fire suppression requires a wetter foam (type IV or type ...

  4. Fire extinguisher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_extinguisher

    Foam-compatible, which is a sodium bicarbonate (BC) based dry chemical, was developed for use with protein foams for fighting class B fires. Most dry chemicals contain metal stearates to waterproof them, but these will tend to destroy the foam blanket created by protein (animal) based foams.

  5. Fire, explosion, uneven pressure: How firefighting foam may ...

    www.aol.com/fire-explosion-uneven-pressure...

    Firefighting foam tops a roadway catch pool off the side of Great Western Road in South Dennis Wednesday morning across the street from the scene of a storage bay fire on Tuesday.

  6. Twin-agent fire extinguishing system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twin-agent_fire...

    A twin-agent fire extinguishing system (TAFES), also commonly referred to as a twin-agent unit (TAU), incorporates the benefits of dry chemical and foam (AFFF or CAFS) fire extinguishing agents. [1] It is most commonly used for AR-FF operations and in industrial areas with high class B hazards.

  7. Purple-K - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purple-K

    Purple-K, also known as PKP, is a dry-chemical fire suppression agent used in some dry chemical fire extinguishers. [1] It is the second most effective dry chemical in fighting class B (flammable liquid) fires after Monnex (potassium allophanate), and can be used against some energized electrical equipment fires (USA class C fires). [2]

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