Protecting Your Home From Fire
While a fireplace or woodstove can be peaceful, an out of
control fire in the home is one of the most frightening things anyone can
imagine. I had a candle set the wall
screen on fire in my bedroom 35 years ago, and almost got burnt up. That left
me with a lifelong concern and vigilance about the risk of fire. With the arrival of spring, I thought I’d you
some constructive advice on how to protect yourself and your home from fire.
Most articles about fire protection focus on keeping hazards
out of the home – don’t smoke in bed, don’t smoke when you are drunk, make sure
candles are in safe enclosures, etc.
That’s all good advice and I won’t repeat it further here. Instead I’m going to focus on what happens
when a fire has started, for whatever the reason.
Your first concern is obviously getting your family and pets
to a safe location. Your next concern is protecting your property, while also
staying safe yourself. That presents a
catch-22. For you to be completely safe
you need to be 100 feet back from the house, from which remove all you can do
is watch your home burn as you wait for the fire trucks.
Professional fire fighters say you should get out, stay out, and let the professionals do their job. That's surely the best way to save lives. But for many of us, the property that is at risk in a fire is valuable. And if the fire department is far away, we must either act to protect our interests, or watch what we have burn.
Professional fire fighters say you should get out, stay out, and let the professionals do their job. That's surely the best way to save lives. But for many of us, the property that is at risk in a fire is valuable. And if the fire department is far away, we must either act to protect our interests, or watch what we have burn.
If you go in and fight the fire, you place yourself at risk,
but if you do it quickly, and do it smartly, your risk is minimized and your
chances of extinguishing the fire are actually far greater than the odds of the
fire department doing it for you. When I
say that I’m not disrespecting the fire department, I am just pointing out that
fires grow exponentially in their first minutes and a kitchen fire may 100
times more difficult to put out five minutes after it started. After 15 minutes it probably will not be
extinguishable without the total loss of the home.
Yet that is the best response time we can home for from our
public servants. They have to answer the
call, load and start the truck, and then drive several miles to reach you. Once there, the hoses have to be unloaded and
deployed, and hydrant hookups made. Even
the fastest firemen need time to do those things. In most cities the fire department will not
be spraying water on your house for at least 10 minutes after your phone call. In the country, that number may triple. If you care about protecting your property,
even five minutes is probably too long.
You need to act seconds after discovery, and act decisively.
You must also act fast because a fire in the house will fill it with smoke, and you can become incapacitated or disoriented. If the house is already full of smoke, all you can do is get out. Most people who die in fires are killed by smoke and gases. If the house fills up, get out.
You must also act fast because a fire in the house will fill it with smoke, and you can become incapacitated or disoriented. If the house is already full of smoke, all you can do is get out. Most people who die in fires are killed by smoke and gases. If the house fills up, get out.
How do you fight fire and win? You
use a combination of early detection then tools, extinguishers, and water. Sounds simple, but the sad truth is that most
home owners have near-zero ability to suppress a fire in the home, and many
can’t even detect fire until far too late. You must also act fast because a fire in the house will fill it with smoke, and you can become incapacitated or disoriented.
Small extinguishers like this can be kept in key spots round the house. |
The biggest risk in most homes is kitchen fires. In our house, we keep small kitchen
extinguishers (see photo) on both sides of the stove. If you get a flash fire, those extinguishers
and a lid for the burning pot will bring most fires under control very fast. If that does not appear to be enough – for
example, if burning oil were to spread onto the floor – I keep a 6 liter 20pound liquid filled restaurant extinguisher hanging 5 steps away in the garage
entry. An extinguisher of that size –
meant for use in commercial kitchens with 80-200lb deep fat fryers - should
suppress any normal residential kitchen fire if caught before the structure
starts to burn.
A 6 liter liquid filled kitchen fire extinguisher |
The key – and I cannot stress this enough – is acting
fast. If you are in the kitchen, and a
fire starts, yell out the alarm and grab the extinguishers, aim and fire. Do not hesitate, because once flames reach up
into the ceiling or back into the walls your house may be doomed.
A wise person will have extinguishers close at hand in all
places where they may be in time of need.
In our house that means we have them in the kitchen, the bedrooms, and
the garage entryways. We have
flashlights in all those places too, in case we have to fight a fire when the
power is out.
Headlamp, flashlight, work light. Keep them close at hand, in bedroom, kitchen, garage |
We keep small extinguishers in the house, and bigger units
in the garage. The logic is simple – the
little units are inoffensive and easy to handle. And you don’t need much in the fire’s first
seconds. If they are not enough, the big
boys are just inside the garage. Out
there I keep several 20lb units with the knowledge that one may not be enough,
and there will be no second chances if they are needed.
Which would you rather risk – $150 for extinguishers or
$300,000 for a new home?
Extinguishers are rated by capacity and types of fires. Kitchen units are Type K, and they are meant
to suppress grease fires on hot commercial kitchen appliances. Some would say that’s overkill in the home
but in my opinion, when putting out fires, there is no such thing.
General purpose extinguishers are usually filled with dry
chemical, and rated for A, B, and C fire.
A type A fire is wood, paper, or trash.
Or the house itself. Type A is
best suppressed with water once it gets going.
Type B and C are flammable liquid fires and electrical
fires, respectively. A gasoline or
grease fire is a type B fire. A good
10lb dry chemical extinguisher is rated 4A, 60BC. That means is can put out a trash fire of 4
square feet, or a 60 square foot pool of burning gasoline. Most people are surprised to read that it’s
harder to put out a trash fire than a gas fire, but it’s often true.
If you have a risk of liquid fires and high value property –
like burning gasoline in a collector car – consider keeping a 20lb CO2extinguisher on hand. Those units are effective
against gas fires and they cool the surfaces to prevent re-flash. Best of all, they leave no residue. Every collector car garage should have at
least one such unit.
If you are really serious about this, and you live in the country, you may also want to look at fire suppression grenades. These devices are thrown into a burning room, where they discharge a mist that cools the room and interrupts the chemical reactions necessary to sustain fire. They can be astonishingly effective, as this video shows. One big benefit of the grenade is that you can safely throw it into a smoke filled room that you could not otherwise enter, and there's good chance it will knock down or put out the fire all by itself.
If you are really serious about this, and you live in the country, you may also want to look at fire suppression grenades. These devices are thrown into a burning room, where they discharge a mist that cools the room and interrupts the chemical reactions necessary to sustain fire. They can be astonishingly effective, as this video shows. One big benefit of the grenade is that you can safely throw it into a smoke filled room that you could not otherwise enter, and there's good chance it will knock down or put out the fire all by itself.
Do not look for extinguishers like these at chain stores or
the mall. Look at industrial supplies
places like Grainger, or local fire equipment suppliers - businesses that serve
gas stations and restaurants. Get the
real stuff because your life will depend on it, if it’s ever needed. If there is doubt about size get the biggest
thing you can easily maneuver. There is no such thing as a fire extinguisher
that was too big, unless it’s so big you can’t get it where you need it.
The extinguishers I’ve described will suppress most fires in
a house, until the structure starts burning.
An example would be if a candle tips over on a sofa, and you do not
notice till the sofa is engulfed in flame.
At that point you have one chance – suppress with water spray,
fast. You can knock down a pretty big
furniture fire fast hitting it with heavy water mist at the base.
With that in mind, I keep 200 feet of hose coiled on a big
hook under the deck, connected and ready to turn on. That is enough hose to reach our backyard
fireplace (150 feet across the yard) and also to reach most anywhere within the
house. There is a backup hose with
another 200 feet of hose on the side of the house. Either one should be sufficient to put out a
burning sofa and many other interior fires that have not yet grown out of
control. Fire departments use much larger hoses to suppress fires fast, but once again timing is of the essence. A single hose will extinguish a blasé at its inception while two pump trucks and six men on hoses will struggle to contain it, once it gets going.
If you are building a home you can take other steps like
raising the ceilings (ours are all 10-15 feet) and using fire resistant
sheetrock. You can also install
sprinkler fire suppression. None of
those things are available at reasonable cost to people with existing homes.
What about the roof catching fire, as with lightning or a
chimney fire? I keep ladders under the
deck, and they would be the only way to suppress a fire from a lightning strike
at the outset. Waiting 10 minutes for a
fire truck in that circumstance generally means the loss of the house.
The next issue is detection, and that is vital. If you don't see a fire start, you have to rely on detectors. We have a fairly large house, and I had all rooms and halls wired with
central station smoke detectors. Central
station means the system calls a dispatch center as well as ringing a bell in
the house. I have monitors in the
bedroom and at the entrances that will announce which zone is in alarm. If you don’t have a system like this the next
best thing is standalone smoke detectors, which need to be in all rooms to be
useful.
The fire code does not call for detectors in every space,
but that is obviously the one and only way to get fast warning. Remember to put detectors around the furnace
and in the attic.
The tips described above should be “good enough” to protect
you if you are home and awake. What if
you are asleep? First of all, sleep with
the bedroom doors closed and be sure there are smoke detectors that work in the
hall. That way, you get an alarm while
your bedroom is still full of clear air (unless the fire starts in your
bedroom.) Make sure there is a means of
getting out of the house from each bedroom.
In our house we have large windows in 4 of the bedrooms and a door to
the deck in the master. So exit is easy
and safe. If your bedrooms are on an
upper floor you should have some means of exiting that will really work. The
fire safety ladders that many people buy don’t generally work. Try climbing one some time and you will see
why – unless the ladder had standoffs and weight at the bottom, you won’t be
able to put your feet in. In a panic,
you will likely fall. The solution is to
get a high grade rope ladder, or a quickly deployable aluminum unit. You also
need to be sure you can actually exit via the windows.
The next thing to consider is night, which is when many
fires happen. With that in mind, I
strongly suggest you have portable lights in every bedroom. I recommend Streamlight Stinger C4
rechargeable. Many police departments
use these. They are very bright, water
and shock proof, and when charged they will run for hours. For most homeowners a good flashlight is a
far smarter investment that a gun, and one that is sure to be useful. I also have larger battery lights that I can
use if the power fails (a time of heightened risk)
If you are going in to fight a fire a headlamp is a great
thing to have too. Petzl is a good brand with NAO being their most powerful unit as of this writing (May 2015) Black Diamond is another good brand, and Streamlight also makes commercial headlamps.
The second thought relates to clothing. I’m going to assume you do not have specialist
fireproof clothes quick at hand. If you
have to exit a burning home you are safer running out naked rather than running
through flames in synthetic nightwear. The synthetics will stick to you if they
burn, with really nasty result. If you
wear clothes, wear cotton, which you can wet for safety. If you wear gloves, use leather, not
synthetics for the same reason. Wear leather
boots, not synthetic too.
If you decide to follow those suggestions, do one more
thing: buy extinguishers for all your
cars too. Everything I suggested will
cost under $1,000 which is a comparatively trivial cost for such protection.
All my life, I have looked to my own resources for defense
and protection. So far, it’s
worked. It can work for you too. Fire departments are great for big fires, and
slow moving fires. But they are of
little help if you want to avoid widespread ruin after a home fire starts. Protect yourself effectively, and you won’t
even need to call them.
Hunter Thompson said it well. “There is one rule in this house. Never, ever, call 911.” Look after yourself.
Woof
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