Cold Fire® is a Hot Fire Extinguisher
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE by Sterling D. Allan ROCKAWAY NJ
For more than a decade now, a product has been on the market that enables
super quick and safe quenching of fires of any kind, from grease fires to oil refinery fires to
tire fires. There is not a fire it cannot put out -- and it does so much faster and more
effectively than any other methods on the market. On top of that, it neutralizes
the hydrocarbon particles, drastically cutting the smoke damage and danger that typically
accompanies a fire. The smoke turns from black to white; and visibility increases.
Other remarkable features are that it leaves no residue that has to be cleaned up after the fire is extinguished. It has an indefinite shelf life at temperatures between 32º and 150º F. Freeze-thaw does not effect its stability. It is biodegradable. It is not slippery. It is inexpensive. It's called Cold Fire ®, manufactured by Fire Freeze Worldwide, Inc. (www.firefreeze.com) and is being used in at least 123 different countries.
Cold Fire is a plant-based chemical that undergoes an endothermic reaction in the presence of
heat, which means it pulls the heat out of a fire. It also encapsulates the fuel source to prevent
additional burning. The encapsulating also separates the fuel from oxygen.
Traditional products work by removing the oxygen from the fire by smothering it in some way or
another, with varying levels of success. Some of these traditional methods of smothering are
messy, and in some cases caustic, blistering the skin. Often, the mess of putting out the
fire is as bad if not worse than the damage from the fire itself. The Halon extinguisher,
deprives not just the fire of oxygen but also the people in vicinity, and has caused death by
suffocation.
Compare that to Cold Fire, which is safe. In the case of a grease fire, a mist attachment on
the nozzle of a Cold Fire dispenser enables the mixture to settle down on the fire without
disrupting the surface tension, thus avoiding the flare-up that usually occurs. The fire is
extinguished, and there is no chemical clean-up afterward.
It only takes a little Cold Fire solution mixed with water through an induction system, ranging usually from a 1% mixture for forest fires to 3% mixture for oil and tire fires, to do the trick. A 10% solution is recommended for stand alone extinguishers of small volume. As with anything new, those who are converted to the existing methods don't always give way readily to something great that comes along. Some patience is required. Presently, Cold Fire is UL listed as a Class A & B Wetting Agent (listing number 2N75) in accordance with NFPA standard 18 for wetting agents. Fire Freeze Worldwide, Inc. is making gradual progress toward the code accrediting Cold Fire for more applications, and hopes to eventually be listed as an extinguisher for all fires.
If you wish to use Cold Fire as a fire extinguisher at home, you can purchase the solution, purchase a pressurizable tank (a one gallon weed sprayer will work), mix them yourself, and pressurize the tank yourself. That is completely legal and acceptable. If you are a business you will still need to have "approved" extinguishers on site as well to comply with code. A 2½ gallon rechargeable fire extinguisher tank costs $148.00. A one gallon weed sprayer can also work, though not as effectively, and costs as little as $10.00. One quart of Cold Fire retails at $16.95, and is enough to refill a one gallon 2½ times with a 10% solution. Fire Freeze sells a 12 oz pressurized can for $14.99 labeled as a "rapid cool down spray."
For around $61.00 you can get a Scotty Bottle attachment for your garden hose with a 5 quart tank
that will induct Cold Fire solution in with the water at a 1% or 3% rate, turning your garden hose
into a fire extinguisher that could handle a fire of nearly any size.
Greg Smith is a Fire Chief in Genola Utah who has been using Cold Fire for three years. He
says, "It has done everything they told us it would do. I've been very impressed with
it." He's demonstrated it on car fires and said it cools the metal off so the fire
doesn't restart. "There's no stink afterward. Usually car fires smell really
bad." They use it on brush fires instead of class A foam. Same with fuel
fires. "With Cold Fire, you just have to carry the one product. We've been
really happy with it."
Smith tells of a time when a motorcycle caught on fire in the driveway of a home.
"From a distance I could see the flames shooting 10 - 15 feet in the air," Smith
said. The home owners had Cold Fire on hand and had the fire out by the time the fire
department arrived.
Understandably, a few firemen are not quite as enthusiastic about this product that may reduce
the need for their profession.
John Miner, a Cold Fire distributor in the Western states, does a demonstration in which he puts a tire in the front seat and another tire in the back seat, sprinkles them with petrol and then lights it. After the car is engulfed in flames, including the tires burning, he comes in with his Cold Fire water, and wearing no protective gear whatsoever (in fact he purposely just wears a T-shirt), douses the fire in short order with just one or two 2½ gallon extinguishers. The heat is dissipated. The vapors largely neutralized. It would take a 150 - 500 gallon fire truck to do the same thing. In a demonstration put on by Fire Freeze Worldwide, Inc., a 900 square foot tank full of crude oil, with gasoline spraying into the crude oil, is set on fire. The heat is tremendous, with flames reaching 100 feet high. Cold Fire put it out in 30 seconds, using two 1½ inch hose lines at 3% induction. Cold Fire continues its testing and use within the oil refinery industry. In a recent test, Cold Fire was used to extinguish 3,000 gallons of diesel/gasoline mixture and one 55-gallon drum of Heptane. After a pre-burn of 5 minutes, Cold Fire extinguished this fire with a 3% solution, a 1½ inch hose with 120 psi on the nozzle. The extinguishment and cool-down was completed in just 1 minute 45 seconds, using just 15 gallons of Cold Fire mixed with 500 gallons of water. Flammable chemicals are spilled on the ground, threatening to flash and burn. Spray Cold Fire on it and the ignition threat is profoundly reduced. Then they let Cold Fire extinguished a oil refinery fire in a firefighter drill in one minute, using just one 1½ inch hose and 500 gallons of a 3% Cold Fire-water solution. A coal mine fire was put out in just 12 - 15 hours using Cold Fire. A forest fire was burning for several days, taking many structures with it. Cold Fire was then used in a 1% solution with water, and the fire was extinguished. It probably would have burned for ten more days otherwise. The biggest killer of firemen is not fire but heart attacks -- more than 1/3 of all fire fighter deaths. They wear all that heavy equipment, and work in super hot conditions for hours on end; they get dehydrated and continue to work, and their heart gives out on them. On average one fireman dies every four days in the U.S. Cold Fire drastically reduces the heat factor in fire fighting, it neutralizes the noxious hydrocarbon fumes emitted from the fire, it puts the fire out far more rapidly, and it drastically speeds up the clean up time because the amount of water-solution required is so much less. In his demonstrations of
Cold Fire's capabilities, John Miner used to take one situation at a time and show Cold Fire at
work. Now he puts them all together -- the burning grease fire, the tire fire, the weed burner,
the gas fire, the couch doused with petrol, and whatever else someone wants to test -- all burning
in one huge conflagration. Then he puts it out rapidly with one 2½ gallon tank of 10% Cold Fire
mixture.Another demonstration he does is to take terry cloth, spray it with Cold Fire, set it on top of his hands with a couple of rubber hoses as well, then he takes a torch in the other hand and points the flame directly on the terry cloth on top of his hand for quite a while. It doesn't burn. His hand is unharmed. He hands you the cloth, and it is not hot. Or he'll spray the Cold Fire solution up his bare arm, and then take the torch up his bare arm with no burning. It sounds sensational, but it demonstrates how effective Cold Fire is in pulling out the heat.
"It works great on burns too," says Miner. Another reason why firemen should
especially appreciate this product.
Insurance companies are beginning catch the drift of the ramifications of this product. Most fires can be stopped before the fire department even arrives because the home owner can put out their own fire. Even deliberate acts of arson which usually result total loss can be quenched with Cold Fire. If you're in a burning building, you spray this on a piece of cloth to breath through, and it neutralizes the toxic hydrocarbon fumes. Spray it on your person and you have much better chance of getting out, even if you have to leap through a wall of flame. "We don't want to see firemen trying to use this to enter into a fire," says Mike Trulby, who has been with Fire Freeze Worldwide, Inc. as Vice President since its inception in 1991, and who has years of firefighting experience. "There are too many variables." The chance of a serious or even fatal error is too high. "We spray it on a man down, and we avoid steam burns."
No wonder many of the automobile racing leagues now requires Cold Fire for their racers.
They plan on having to walk through fire as part of their profession. It also puts out the
tire and fuel fires very quickly. Cold Fire has saved many lives.
See also
References:
Other Products with name: "Cold Fire"
Page composed by SDA
Nov. 22, 2003 |
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