Author Topic: School of the boat 8 Oct O8 (fire fighting part 3)  (Read 15997 times)

Offline Darrin

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School of the boat 8 Oct O8 (fire fighting part 3)
« on: October 08, 2008, 09:07:59 PM »
Knowing that I have asked JT to do this block of instruction and he has done an absolutely fantastic job with it, I sadly am going to step on his toes with these two questions because I have dealt with both in real life and these need to be discussed because 1 may happen and it is not a pretty site and the other nearly cost us an Aircraft Carrier and many planes and submarines when it caught fire..

1.)  Earlier I asked what a "screaming alpha" is and I would like to know the answer to this because sadly I have seen it and it haunts me to think about it and I don't wish it on anyone....  Remember one thing about the "A" class fire is that it leaves an ASH and it hurts like hell while the fire is going.

2.) How to put out a class "D" fire....  Folks look up magnesium and see how to put it out because submarines carry flares and other compontents that used them.. OR if you are bored look up the fire on the USS FORESTALL and see what THEY did to put it out.

To put this into perspective, there was a Medal Of Honor given to a crew member of a bomber who had a flare light off INSIDE of the crew compartment and the airman severly burned BOTH of his hands and arms putting the flare in the ejector and getting rid of it before it destroyed his plane.

Offline JTheotonio

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Re: School of the boat 8 Oct O8 (fire fighting part 3)
« Reply #1 on: October 08, 2008, 09:50:35 PM »
Darrin,

I and I think both of us need others to step in here to answer these questions - I work now in the electrical utility business (OK I'm a regulator now) and this also can relate to some very serious electrical accidents (I'm trying not to get this away), your Screaming Fire is a terrible occurrence and one that every shipmate needs to remember how to deal with.   When answered let me tell a tale about my business now. Magnesium is just nasty. They talk about it in DC classes, but rarely demonstrate these fires for a reason.
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Offline Darrin

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Re: School of the boat 8 Oct O8 (fire fighting part 3)
« Reply #2 on: October 09, 2008, 08:27:55 AM »
Understand you on that JT,
sorry if I stepped on your toes on it because this is your block of instruction and not mine

Offline JTheotonio

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Re: School of the boat 8 Oct O8 (fire fighting part 3)
« Reply #3 on: October 09, 2008, 08:45:46 AM »
No problem - you are not stepping, more like a positive contribution to help everyone.  :D
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Offline JTheotonio

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Re: School of the boat 8 Oct O8 (fire fighting part 4)
« Reply #4 on: October 09, 2008, 09:31:25 AM »
While you are looking to answer Darrin's question - here something to ponder about fires in a compartment

Hot Air Exposure - what happens to you  :knuppel2:
200 degrees - Incapacitation 35 minutes, Death 60 minutes
300 degrees - Incapacitation 5 minutes, Death 30 minutes
380 degrees - Immediate incapacitation, Death 15 minutes
400 degrees - Irreversible respiratory tract damage
650 degrees - Death  :angel:

During its life, a compartment fire normally experiences four different stages: growth, flashover, fully developed fire, and ???

What is the last stage of a fire? (I've given you the first three above)  :-\



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Offline Darrin

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Re: School of the boat 8 Oct O8 (fire fighting part 3)
« Reply #5 on: October 09, 2008, 11:27:43 AM »
Very nice question and a tough one at that, took me a minute to remember what the last answer is ;)

Offline Lance Dean

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Re: School of the boat 8 Oct O8 (fire fighting part 3)
« Reply #6 on: October 10, 2008, 08:57:14 PM »
Really, really hot?

 :2funny:

Offline JTheotonio

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Re: School of the boat 8 Oct O8 (fire fighting part 3)
« Reply #7 on: October 11, 2008, 09:36:30 AM »
I'm heading Becuna for their reenactment day - lunch in After Battery ... Yum!  :smitten:
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Offline Lance Dean

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Re: School of the boat 8 Oct O8 (fire fighting part 3)
« Reply #8 on: October 11, 2008, 09:24:40 PM »
Last stage of fire:  is it decay?

(thanks little birdy)

Offline JTheotonio

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Re: School of the boat 8 Oct O8 (fire fighting part 3)
« Reply #9 on: October 12, 2008, 12:32:07 PM »
thanks little birdy...

Little birdy would not last too long.  But yes, the last stage of a fire is decay.  That occurs because the fire has consumed all fuel and O2. So there is nothing left to sustain the fire.

Good work little Birdy.
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Offline Darrin

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Re: School of the boat 8 Oct O8 (fire fighting part 3)
« Reply #10 on: October 12, 2008, 05:37:03 PM »
Lance,
tell your little birdy happy b'day ;) she's a friend of mine also and I remembered this morning to email her and wish her one.

NOW back to the TWO questions that I asked at the begining of this school of the boat :knuppel2:

1.)  What is a Screaming Alpha???

2.)  How do you put out a magnesium fire???

Offline Ctwilley

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Re: School of the boat 8 Oct O8 (fire fighting part 3)
« Reply #11 on: October 14, 2008, 08:21:08 AM »
You would put out a Class D fire with a Type 1 or Type 2 Class D fire extinguisher which utilizes the following chemicals:

Type 1: (used for controling magnesium, sodium, potassium, sodium potassium alloys, uranium, and powdered aluminum fires) Uses sodium chloride to cake on the metal and smother the fire.

Type 2: (used for any class D fire including lithium) uses a copper based dry powder.

Offline Darrin

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Re: School of the boat 8 Oct O8 (fire fighting part 3)
« Reply #12 on: October 15, 2008, 10:10:05 AM »
Alright folks it is Wed and it is time for JT to keep moving on with this block of instruction, so with that being said

A "Screaming Alpha" is a person who is on fire and screaming the hole time before either the fire on them is put out or they are overcome by the fire and yes as all of us know a person when burned leaves an ash IF they burn long enough and hot enough. And sadly I have seen it in person and heard the screams of the victim, it is not a pretty site nor will you ever forget that smell and for the first couple hours no matter how many showers and bath's you take you will not feel like you got that smell off of you.

For a Magnesium fire on a submarine the only thing to do (or at least what I was taught in the early 90's) was to COOL the surrounding area with as much water as you can put on it. The flares that were carried onboard used magnesium and the PYRO lockers have a flooding system to put as much water into that locker and then into the bilges as the fire main can handle and the only thing that we could do was cool the surrounding area to keep it from catching fire and burning more of the boat up. Obviously the boat if submerged would have to surface and start running the trim and drain pumps to get as much water out of the boat as possible and then head for the closest Naval Port at the best possible speed and hope that the magnesium doesn't burn through the hull and if it does hope like hell you have a DC plug big enough to fit the hole in the hull and that your crew is very proficient in that aspect of DC.

On a WWII diesel boat who's fire mains more then likely are inop and the boat catches fire the only thing that your can try to do is put a fire extinguisher or two on it and then shut the watertight doors and ventalation hull stops and try to contain the fire into that one compartment. And yes that means securing the electricity to the boat and evacuating the whole boat until the F&ES show up and you tell them what compartment it is in and that hopefully you have it contained to one compartment located in x compartment. The BIG reason why I keep telling you to get the hell out of the boat after you have tried immediate actions is because you don't have any self contained breathing apparatus' and a fire main ready to go in case of a fire. While I do know that Torsk has an OBA mounted and some canisters for it and a FFE and an operational P-100 with hoses to reach anywhere inside of the pressure hull, I would hesitate to use it unless there were TWO or more folks in OBA's and we had enough fire extinguishers/hoses for the job because you have to be on the buddy system when fighting these fires because if you lone ranger it and you become incapacitated you will become a casualty that the fire dept was not expecting to have to try to find and then remove you from the boat while they are fighting the fire.

Offline JTheotonio

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Re: School of the boat 8 Oct O8 (fire fighting part 3)
« Reply #13 on: October 15, 2008, 11:36:00 AM »
I'm working on a question.  My regular job is taking up way too much time (doing two jobs, plus this is tough).
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Offline JTheotonio

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School of the boat 15 Oct O8 (Breathing)
« Reply #14 on: October 15, 2008, 12:36:56 PM »
Breathing is something we take for granted.  It is however important.  Prolonged submergence in a WWII Fleet Submarine will cause the original air in the submarine to become vitiated by the 1) reduced level of O2 and 2) by the increased level of CO2. This quiz falls more in to emergencies.  However, part of the question is vitial to working in a damaged compartment.   :buck2:

So my question is multi-part.
1. What are the upper acceptable levels of CO2?
2. What is the lower acceptable level of O2?
3. You are using chemical absorbents to reduce CO2, but you also need to stay submerged longer, what are you two options to revitalize the atmosphere?
4. Describe the locations and use of the oxygen system.

Lance, as you know Miners (not minors) where know to use little birds in cages.  They took the birds down in the mines when working.  Birds would collapse before a miner did when methane levels went too high.
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