New York Paper - Installation of Fire-fighting Equipment in Mines (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Benjamin F. Tillson
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
21
File Size:
921 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1923

Abstract

Although portable fire extinguishers are valuable for fires in an incipient stage, some medium that will dissipate a large amount of heat is needed to fight a fire in mine timbers, because of the size to which the fire will probably have grown before it is discovered. Scaling off, or otherwise smothering such a fire with gases that will not support combustion, is often ineffective for the residual heat will cause reignition when the area is opened and fresh air reaches the hot charred timber. The most effective ways of fighting mine fires, therefore, are to drown and cool the hot zone with water, and to "load out" the partly burned material. Either of these methods requires a direct attack of water ; upon the inflamed material; therefore, every mine containing a large ' quantity of timber or other combustible should be as completely equipped with a fire-hydrant system as it is with compressed-air mains. Mine managers may object to the expenditure, especially if they have not suffered from mine fires. The cost of such preventative measures, however, is only a small portion of the possible losses, and the water pipes can be used for other purposes, which will pay the carrying charges. They can supply water to the rock drills, which will encourage more wet drilling with hollow-drill steel, for the trouble and expense of packing water to individual tanks at the drills will be removed. The carbon-tetrachloride hand extinguishers seem to have no place in mining except for fires that start in electrical equipment. They give off noxious gas, which may prove poisonous in confined quarters; and as it is heavier than air it is of no value for smothering fires overhead or in side timbers and would be dissipated by a good ventilating draft. The old soda-acid extinguisher or the more modern "foam" types ' are preferable. The former probably does not rely for its efficacy on the carbon dioxide generated but on the smothering and cooling effect of the water and the trajectory of stream that may be obtained because of the gas pressure developed. The production of a foam having a tough film to smother a fire, even on overhead surfaces, with the added
Citation

APA: Benjamin F. Tillson  (1923)  New York Paper - Installation of Fire-fighting Equipment in Mines (with Discussion)

MLA: Benjamin F. Tillson New York Paper - Installation of Fire-fighting Equipment in Mines (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1923.

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