Structural Firefighting Flashcards

Structural Firefighting

1
Q

Stages of fire progression

A

Phase 1: Developing Fire Phase 2: Flashover
Phase 3: Fully Developed Phase 4: Decay

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2
Q

What is the neutral plane?

A

The area between over pressure (hot fire gases) and under pressure (fresh air)

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3
Q

Hot fire gasses could pose a risk of becoming?

A

Fire gas ignition

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4
Q

7 Signs of Flashover

A
  1. Ventilation controlled, vented fire2. Painful radiant heat3. Hot surfaces 4. Fingers of flame through smoke 5. Increased rate of pyrolysis 6. Low turbulent neutral plane 7. Increased turbulence of neutral plane
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5
Q

Signs of backdraught

A
  1. Ventilation controlled, non vented fire2. Lack of visible flame3. Dirty smoke4. Smoke pulsating through small gaps and openings5. Air drawn in (whistling noises)6. Indicators of extreme heat e.g. blistering of paintwork, crazing of glass in windows
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6
Q

Flammability range is the ratio of

A

Fuel to air Too low concentration and things cant burn Too high concentration and things cant burn

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7
Q

The decomposition of a substance is

A

Pyrolysis caused by heat

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8
Q

Direct attack - what is the correct branch setting

A

Jet, flow rate 115 to 475 lpm

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9
Q

What is the branch setting when gas cooling

A

30-60degreecone angle, 115 lpm at 700kpa

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10
Q

What is gas cooling, when is it used

A

Used to control the fire environment when advancing during fire attack, to perform search & rescue and for protection.The water droplets are converted to steam, the flammable gases are cooled and diluted below their Auto ignition temperature. The steam expands by absorbing the thermal energy/heat of the fire gases, and displacing the oxygen away from the fire

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11
Q

What are the Gas laws

A

Thornton’s rule - As oxygen increase, the heat rate increasesCharles’s law - Gases expand when heated. Gases become less dense and will rise when heated Gay-Lussac’s law - when gases are confined and heated, pressure increases. Increased pressure, higher temperatures.

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12
Q

Definition of a fire gas ignition?

A

Fire gas explosion ignited in another compartment e.g. second floor, adjacent room

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13
Q

When do we use door entry

A

Always

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14
Q

Ventilation vs fuel control signs - scenarios will be given in exam, list which one it is e.g. bush fire

A

Fuel Controlled signs- Developing fire- high neutral plane- better visibility- bright yellow flame- fire in decay stageVentilation - fully developed fire- low neutral plane- poor visibility- air being drawn back in to fire- smoke pulsations- smouldering fire- whistling sounds

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15
Q

Intent of an indirect fire extinguish attack and what is it most suited for?

A

To extinguish a fire by creating large amounts of steam. This has a smothering effect on the fire by displacing the oxygen. This method is generally used when the fire is fully involved or to suppress a suspected backdraught risk.

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16
Q

List the extinguisher colours and what they are most suited for

A

Red - Water - AWhite - Dry powder - A,B, C & EBlue - Foam - A & BBlack - CO2 - B & EA - Wood, Paper, PlasticsB - Flammable LiquidsC - Flammable gasesE - Electrical

17
Q

What is meant by overhaul

A

Overhaul involves the systematic checking, turning over and wetting down of structural materials and contents to ensure that no pockets of fire still exist

18
Q

What are 5 signs of structural collapse

A
  1. Falling plaster, mortar, bricks or from walls or ceilings 2. Cancerous concrete spalling3. walls leaning or bulging4. ceilings sagging5. floors spongey or springy6. gaps appearing in between walls, beams or ceilings, or walls and floors7. cracked or sagging arches over door or window openings8. displacement of supporting pillars, joists or beams
19
Q

What is salvage operations

A

Salvage describes the actions taken during and immediately after the fire to minimise the damage caused by fire and by the water used to extinguish it.

20
Q

What are some assisted evacuation producers for high rises?

A

Smoke curtains, pressurised stairs, pressurised zones and sprinkler systems