To expand on Aunt Peggy's comment, in some aircraft, the equipment list shows the fire extinguisher as a required item installed at the factory. In that case, the aircraft is not legally airworthy without it.Not an issue. Unless you get a cabin fire. You should be able to look up the required equipment.
You won't find that exact language. What you will find is something like "Certification Basis FAR 23 effective February 1, 1965, and Amendments 23-1 through 23-45" (or an amendment later than 23-45), with no specific reference to 14 CFR 23.851. This is because the cockpit fire extinguisher requirement of the previous version of 23.851 only applied to Communter Category Part 23-certified aircraft before Amendment 23-45 was adopted as a Final Rule in 1993, in which fire extinguisher requirement was expanded to include all Part 23 aircraft. Propsal 65 of that Final Rule made that modification to section 23.851, which did not exist before the original version of 23.851 was made final in 1987. See http://rgl.faa.gov/Regulatory_and_G...d9b03117bc05edd9862569030062b2b0!OpenDocumentStep 1 - if the aircraft was certified to 23.851 it is required and the airplane is unaurworthy without it. Find out by looking up the certification basis on your airplane's type certificate data sheet (on FAA website). If not certificated to 23.851 go to the next step.
You won't find that exact language. What you will find is something like "Certification Basis FAR 23 effective February 1, 1965, and Amendments 23-1 through 23-45" (or an amendment later than 23-45), with no specific reference to 14 CFR 23.851. This is because the cockpit fire extinguisher requirement of the previous version of 23.851 only applied to Communter Category Part 23-certified aircraft before Amendment 23-45 was adopted as a Final Rule in 1993, in which fire extinguisher requirement was expanded to include all Part 23 aircraft. Propsal 65 of that Final Rule made that modification to section 23.851, which did not exist before the original version of 23.851 was made final in 1987. See http://rgl.faa.gov/Regulatory_and_G...d9b03117bc05edd9862569030062b2b0!OpenDocument
That said, regardless of certification basis, any aircraft built after 1978 will have a POH which includes a list of the required equipment, and in that case, you need only check the required equipment list in the POH/AFM. Before that, the requirement did not exist under Part 23.
Does the FAA hold that 'If you have it, it has to be right.'? As in even though the fire extinguisher is optional, if you have it it has to be full and within date?
Does the FAA hold that 'If you have it, it has to be right.'? As in even though the fire extinguisher is optional, if you have it it has to be full and within date?
Why not CO2?Just stick with a Halon unit such as pure 1301 or a 1211/1301 mix (no CO2, water, dry chemical, HFC, or the like -- and that means no "Halotron" which is not repeat not Halon and isn't nearly as safe), and you'll have "the right one, baby."
How long do you stay conscious when inhaling CO2?
Didn't think halon was healthy to suck on, either...
Didn't think halon was healthy to suck on, either...
Halon 1301 is nontoxic, although 1211 is somewhat. However, the issue is the effective concentration for firefighting versus the concentration which creates hazards to human life. Brominated Halons kill the fire by chemical interaction with the kinetics of the combustion process, and are effective at very low concentrations. Halon 1301 can be a suffocant at about 60% concentration, so there is that potential hazard, too, but it is an effective firefighting agent at less than one-tenth that concentration, so you don't have to use that much of it to put out the fire. Even with 1211, it takes three times the effective firefighting concentration to create a hazard. OTOH, with CO2, which is simply an oxygen-displacement agent, the same concentration which is needed to kill a fire also kills people by the same mechanism -- reducing the oxygen concentration in the atmosphere. That's why we use brominated Halons in aircraft cabins, not CO2.Didn't think halon was healthy to suck on, either...
Depends on which halon you're talking about. Halon 1301 (bromotrifluoromethane) is nontoxic, and lethal only at about 60% concentration due to oxygen displacement. However, other brominated Halons are toxic. 1211 (bromochlorodifluoromethane) can be toxic at concentrations only about three times the effective firefighting concentration, which is why it has the minimum room size label. 2402 (dibromotetrafluoroethane), which we never used as a firefighting agent but the Soviets did, is lethal at extremely low concentrations, and you would not survive in a cabin where it was discharged. Only place we ever used 2402 was in unmanned space vehicles.Maybe not long term, but short term you're ok.
You can do that with 1301. Don't try that with 1211 or 2402.When Halon first came out they had a demo at trade shows, a plexi box the guy would get in, he'd light a smoke with a Zippo leaving it burn, then they hit it with Halon. The smoke and lighter would go out but the guy would remain standing.
How long do you stay conscious when inhaling CO2?
There is also the argument that it can make you "IFR in the cockpit" and cause coughing and choking as well as serious lung damage if discharged in an enclosed space. Please replace your dry chem with Halon as recommended by the FAA and every aviation fire safey expert in the country.It seems the argument against dry chemical is that the post fire residue is corrosive. Like I care! If I have to fight an onboard fire I am not worrying about future corrosion, the insurance company just bought my hull!
I have dry chemical behind the left seat.
How about additional units of Halon instead? Really -- those new mixes aren't nearly as effective and create a much more lethal post-fire environment.Don't leave the ground lately without one Halon plus two additional units of more modern mixes. If I need it and they kill me before cockpit fire, I'll count myself the luckier....
I've done it once for about 90 seconds at ground level (not intentionally ). Realistically, you're going to be limited to whatever oxygen supply you've already got in your lungs and blood stream. Effective conciousness is going to be short without fresh air - but most of our non-pressurized aircraft are quite "leaky" and will exchange that high-percentage CO2 environment pretty quickly. Short acute exposure to a high-CO2 environment won't do much more than cause increased breathing rate and heart rate, 2 minutes or better and it's night-night.
(I was in a 10'x15' room with a 300-pound liquid CO2 tank that blew a 1" line and dumped itself quite rapidly, grabbed a kid that was in there with me, went to the floor and pushed/crawled out the door to outdoors)
It seems the argument against dry chemical is that the post fire residue is corrosive. Like I care! If I have to fight an onboard fire I am not worrying about future corrosion, the insurance company just bought my hull!
I have dry chemical behind the left seat.
It seems the argument against dry chemical is that the post fire residue is corrosive. Like I care! If I have to fight an onboard fire I am not worrying about future corrosion, the insurance company just bought my hull!
I have dry chemical behind the left seat.
(I was in a 10'x15' room with a 300-pound liquid CO2 tank that blew a 1" line and dumped itself quite rapidly, grabbed a kid that was in there with me, went to the floor and pushed/crawled out the door to outdoors)
Maybe not long term, but short term you're ok. When Halon first came out they had a demo at trade shows, a plexi box the guy would get in, he'd light a smoke with a Zippo leaving it burn, then they hit it with Halon. The smoke and lighter would go out but the guy would remain standing.
How about additional units of Halon instead? Really -- those new mixes aren't nearly as effective and create a much more lethal post-fire environment.
"Halogen" is not the same as "Halon." There are HFC and HCFC agents called "Halotron" and other things, and they contain halogens (fluorine and chlorine). However, they are not "Halon", do not contain bromine (the big gun in that inventory, also a halogen), and are substantially less effective than brominated agents like Halons 1301 and 1211. The negative issues I discussed regarding speed of extinguishment and post-fire environment in an enclosed area like a cockpit apply to those agents which are halogenated but not brominated. For cockpit use, make sure it's HALON (either 1301, 1211, or a combination of the two), not some similar but different name.I rechecked and turns out I did a better job initially outfitting than I remembered, all 3 units are halogen. Some of the other units in the hangar are non-halogen mixes though.
"Halogen" is not the same as "Halon." There are HFC and HCFC agents called "Halotron" and other things, and they contain halogens (fluorine and chlorine). However, they are not "Halon", do not contain bromine (the big gun in that inventory, also a halogen), and are substantially less effective than brominated agents like Halons 1301 and 1211. The negative issues I discussed regarding speed of extinguishment and post-fire environment in an enclosed area like a cockpit apply to those agents which are halogenated but not brominated. For cockpit use, make sure it's HALON (either 1301, 1211, or a combination of the two), not some similar but different name.
We used to get coolers of material in with dry ice in them. The coolers were 4' x 3' x 3'. As it sublimated it displaced the O2 in the cooler. Reaching in to get some of the last product of of the cooler I started to feel myself lose consciousness. Luckily I was able to get my head out of there and not pass out in the cooler.