
Extinguishers. More information on the various types of fire extinguisher, with details of the application for which each of the Extinguishers is intended.
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This page is a near duplicate of the more popular title Fire Extinguishers because the page titles should be about the same topic.
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There are basically four different types or classes of Extinguishers, each of which extinguishes specific types
of fire. Newer Extinguishers use a picture/labeling system to designate which types of fires they are to be used on.
Older Extinguishers are labeled with colored geometrical shapes with letter designations. Both of these types of
labels are shown below with the description of the different classes of extinguishers.
Additionally, Class A and Class B Extinguishers have a numerical rating which is based on tests conducted by
Underwriter's Laboratories that are designed to determine the extinguishing potential for each size and type of
extinguisher. Click on any of the topics listed below for additional information that may be helpful to know.
Class A Extinguishers will put out fires in ordinary combustibles, such as wood and paper. The numerical rating
for this class of fire extinguisher refers to the amount of water the fire extinguisher holds and the amount of fire it
will extinguish.
Class B Extinguishers should be used on fires involving flammable liquids, such as grease, gasoline, oil, etc.
The numerical rating for this class of fire extinguisher states the approximate number of square feet of a flammable
liquid fire that a non-expert person can expect to extinguish.
Class C Extinguishers are suitable for use on electrically energized fires. This class of Extinguishers does
not have a numerical rating. The presence of the letter 'C' indicates that the extinguishing agent is non-conductive.
Class D Extinguishers are designed for use on flammable metals and are often specific for the type of metal in
question. There is no picture designator for Class D extinguishers. These extinguishers generally have no rating nor are
they given a multi-purpose rating for use on other types of fires.
Many extinguishers available today can be used on different types of fires and will be labeled with more than one
designator, e.g. A-B, B-C, or A-B-C. Make sure that if you have a multi-purpose extinguisher it is properly labeled.