One of the easiest ways to prevent a fire is to remove potential fuel and heat sources before they can combine. Knowing the classes of fire and where your firefighting equipment is keeps a small fire from spreading.
How Do You Remove Fire Hazards?
Take away what a fire needs to start.
- Remove potential fuel sources such as wood, paper, trash, flammable liquids, greases, and oily rags
- Remove potential heat sources, including sparks and open flames near flammable materials
- Close or remove open containers that may hold a flammable
What Are Basic Fire Safety Tips?
Know your equipment and your exits before you ever need them.
- Know where pull stations and fire extinguishers are located
- Know where your exits are and keep them free of clutter or tripping hazards
- Call for help from a safe location
What Are the Classes of Fire?
Fire extinguishers control or put out small, incipient-stage fires and help protect evacuation routes.
- Class A: ordinary combustibles like wood, cloth, paper, rubber, and plastics
- Class B: flammable liquids like oil, gases, greases, and solvents
- Class C: live electrical
- Class D: combustible metals
- Class K: cooking oils and greases
How Do You Maintain Fire Extinguishers?
Check them monthly so they work when needed.
- Perform monthly inspections for damage, dents, abrasions, and broken parts
- Replace or remove any damaged extinguishers
- Record the inspection by placing your initials and the date on the tag