Home fire extinguishers

1,303 Views | 6 Replies | Last: 3 yr ago by third coast..
Cramp00
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What do you use and where do you have them? I've put it off far too long.
bam02
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AG
I keep a rechargeable type abc in the garage. It's easy to access from kitchen.

I also have a disposable kidde in utility room but that's only 10 feet from the one in the garage. I keep another kidde on back porch near grill/fire pit. I need to put one on second floor. I also keep one in both vehicles.
MyMamaSaid
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I have 3 Kidde 4 pound extinguishers: one in each of the garage, kitchen and master bath.

I've had extinguishers in my houses since the 1st week of ownership. Never needed one in the first 21 years, but glad I had one when I needed it. Freak surge protector explosion on my AC condenser outside in December of 2016. Could have burned the house down. I just happened to be home and heard it blow up. Ran into garage and emptied an extinguisher on it to kill the fire. Water wouldn't have worked given it was electrical. Called the FD immediately afterwards and they took 6 minutes to arrive. That 6 minutes could have been the difference between a minor repair and a major house fire.

Extinguishers are incredibly cheap insurance. If you've never used one, buy an extra and empty it out in an open field just for practice using one.

Great post given the time of year (Christmas trees, lights, space heaters, etc)
rilloaggie
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I rarely get to play expert on texags but this thread is my time to shine! My dad owns a fire extinguisher business which I grew up working at and I put myself through college servicing fire equipment so I guess I am pretty much an expert in the arena!

Garage. 5lb ABC extinguisher. That is big enough to handle anything in your typical residential garage. Any fire that wont be put out by that is better handled by the fire department and is likely going to take out whatever is on fire in the garage. Don't overestimate your abilities and try to fight big fires. Plenty of folks die of smoke inhalation running into houses to try and put out fires. If you do use one, remember PASS. Pull, aim, squeeze, sweep.

Kitchen. 2.5lb extinguisher here. ABC(dry chemical) is most common but if you have the extra cash burning a hole in your wallet, call a fire extinguisher company and get a halon/halotron or clean agent extinguisher. This is purely for convenience so that when your wife sets a toaster on fire you don't have to spend weeks finding ABC powder in places all over your house. Yes, the stuff floats everywhere. The clean agent ones will set you back about $150-200 for a 2.5 lb size, plan on $50-60 to recharge if you use it. Cheap 2.5 lb dry agents probably cost $25, and are either disposable or $20 to recharge.

If you want one for your grill or fire pit or whatever go with a 2.5 gal water extinguisher. Amazon sells Amerex brand (good fire extinguishers) that you can refill yourself if you have an air compressor and they are great for wood/paper/leaves (Class A) fires. It will suck if you use a dry chem on your smoker and end up with ABC powder seasoning all over the inside. This last one is probably overkill if you have a water hose...

Inspections. Check the gauge once a year and make sure they are still in the green zone. The cheap ones from a box store are prone to leaking. If you are feeling extra ambitious, turn dry chemicals upside down and tap on the bottom 2-4 times with a rubber mallet to loosen the powder. Fire extinguishers greater than 12 years old (dry chem) or 5 years old (CO2 or water) will have to be hydrostatically tested before a company will refill them. If you buy one from a box store, make sure what you are buying has a metal head on it. As a general rule, the plastic ones are mostly disposable. A few plastic headed ones can be refiled but even some of them are labeled as "UL Classified" and not "UL Listed" which basically means they aren't refillable. If you use a dry chem extinguisher, even just a little, it will continue to leak pressure so don't squirt a little on a small fire and expect it work keep working after the initial use.

Edited to add, if you have a larger (5-20lb) fire extinguisher with a hose, take a look in the end of the hose when you do your annual inspection. Mud dauber wasps love to build their nests in the ends of the hoses. A testament to how strong their engineering is, I have seen a nest keep any pressure from leaving the hose on a extinguisher that was pressurized to 195 psi!
EcoZapp.AC&Air.Purifiers
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Uline & one can get smaller ones for not much, and place somewhere "where someone panicking might look 1st or 2nd"

Play a Family Feud round, and get everyones guess on the top 5 places a fire extinguish "Would Be", placing them there is how ppl think, and might show immediate locations they would look.

Also Cars & Trucks, running outside and knowing 100% there is a fire extinguisher in a car door is good.



Also having one in line of sight just somewhere, in case of plumber running around with tiny fire freaking out one day. ( things happen)



When they Expire, use them up & have fun + reorder.


Builder93
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AG
I have one of these:
91AggieLawyer
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Once at my church youth camp years ago, my group was putting on a skit where we needed a smoke machine. We didn't want to go rent one (didn't know then where to get one) and had no idea what else to do. A buddy's dad had 2 fire extinguishers and recommended we take and use those. So we did. It worked OK for the skit but that crap lingered in the air. The people that went after us complained it got in their throat and they were gagging and spitting. Fun times, but not the greatest idea in history!

Anyway, great topic.
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