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This Presentation Developed By Drew R. Smith This presentation may be modified or reproduced by individual fire departments or training organizations provided.

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Presentation on theme: "This Presentation Developed By Drew R. Smith This presentation may be modified or reproduced by individual fire departments or training organizations provided."— Presentation transcript:

1 This Presentation Developed By Drew R. Smith This presentation may be modified or reproduced by individual fire departments or training organizations provided it is not used to generate revenue or in any commercial manner.

2 The New Class Class K

3 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 3 Background In the past ten years or so there has been a major change in commercial cooking involving deep- fat fryers and cooking medias

4 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 4 Fryers Older deep-fat fryers were either uninsulated or lightly insulated Newer deep-fat fryers are well insulated Thus, older fryers cool faster than newer fryers

5 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 5 Cooking media Older fryers used animal fat Newer fryers use vegetable oil Vegetable oils cook at higher temperatures than animal fat

6 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 6 Unlike gasoline, paint thinner and other flammable liquids, cooking oils have a wide auto-ignition temperature range

7 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 7 When cooking oils heat beyond their auto-ignition temperature the oil changes composition resulting in an oil than now has an auto ignition temperature as much as 50°F lower before ROOM TEMP HEATED AI Temp New AI Temp

8 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 8 Unless the entire amount of oil cools below this new auto-ignition temperature the fire will reflash and burn

9 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 9 A new class of fire is born NFPA 10 defines Class K as Fires in cooking appliances that involves combustible cooking media (vegetable or animal oils or fats)

10 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 10 Dry Chemical Agents sodium bicarbonate or potassium bicarbonate, when applied to burning cooking oils create a chemical reaction known as saponification

11 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 11 All cooking oils, greases and fats contain free fatty acids (saturated fat) When added to a free fatty acid, alkaline extinguishing agents (such as sodium bicarb or potassium bicarb) form a soap foam on the oils surface This soap foam performs just like regular firefighting foam to secure vapors and extinguish the fire

12 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 12 When dry chemical is used to create this saponification it will not cool all of the oil in the fryer

13 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 13 Wet chemicals (liquids) that contain an alkaline agent are more effective Agents may contain potassium acetate, potassium citrate and/or potassium carbonate Applied in a fine mist the agents cool and form the saponification These to action cool the oil to below its auto-ignition temperature

14 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 14 UL tests verify this UL conducted dozens of tests comparing Class B-rated dry chemical portable fire extinguishers with these new Class K wet agent portable fire extinguishers Tests showed that an 80B (20#) extinguisher that put out a 200-square foot pan fire could not put out a deep-fat fryer with only a 2& sq-foot surface

15 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 15 The Dry Chem knocked the fire down (with a big dust cloud) only to reignite The Wet Agent fully extinguished the fire for at least 20 minute or until the oils temperature was below 60°F

16 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 16 As a side note... Wet agents can be found in both permanent systems and portable fire extinguishers They are applied using fine mist nozzles to reduce splashing Most permanent kitchen extinguishing systems display a permanent making stating the equipment is UL300- compliant

17 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 17 NFPA 10 requires that a portable Class K fire extinguisher only be used AFTER the installed system is activated When a Class K portable fire extinguisher is installed in a restaurant there is to be a sign above it stating this requirement

18 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 18 Class K Fire Extinguishers Also carry a class A & B rating Class K rating does not carry a number value such as class A & B ratings

19 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 19 Wet Agent units are available in both 1&1/2 and 2&1/2 gallon units Both the 1&1/2 and 2&1/2 gallon units carry 2-A:1B ratings While dry-agent Class K extinguishers are available, this program focuses on wet-agent extinguishers

20 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 20 Fire Department Operations Recognize the situation and the need for the Class K fire extinguisher Activate the installed system first Wearing full protective gear, apply the wet agent from the portable fire extinguisher Apply all the agent in the extinguisher EVEN if the fire appears to be out

21 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 21 REMEMBER Wet agents works by cooling AND saponification

22 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 22 References The New Class, J. Craig Voelkert, NFPA Journal, July/August 1999 NFPA 10 - Standard for Portable Fire Extinguishers, 1998 Edition

23 Class K Fires & Portable Extinguishers 23 The End


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