AU680300C - Method for fighting fire - Google Patents

Method for fighting fire

Info

Publication number
AU680300C
AU680300C AU77011/94A AU7701194A AU680300C AU 680300 C AU680300 C AU 680300C AU 77011/94 A AU77011/94 A AU 77011/94A AU 7701194 A AU7701194 A AU 7701194A AU 680300 C AU680300 C AU 680300C
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
pressure
liquid
gas
containers
valve
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
AU77011/94A
Other versions
AU7701194A (en
AU680300B2 (en
Inventor
Goran Sundholm
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Marioff Corp Oy
Original Assignee
Marioff Corp Oy
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from FI934340A external-priority patent/FI934340A0/en
Application filed by Marioff Corp Oy filed Critical Marioff Corp Oy
Publication of AU7701194A publication Critical patent/AU7701194A/en
Publication of AU680300B2 publication Critical patent/AU680300B2/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU680300C publication Critical patent/AU680300C/en
Assigned to MARIOFF CORPORATION OY reassignment MARIOFF CORPORATION OY Alteration of Name(s) in Register under S187 Assignors: SUNDHOLM, GORAN
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

Links

Description

Method for fighting fire
The present invention relates to a method for fighting fire, especially for fire-fighting in engine rooms of ships and spaces comparable with them.
Figure 1 in the Finnish Patent Application 933997 shows a .number of nozzles, sprinklers or spray heads 7 in a bilge space 3 of an engine room 1. The spray heads 7 in question are directed downwards. The object of the invention is to improve this arrangement and to provide an effective fire-fighting especially in narrow and possibly winding spaces, such as bilge spaces, channels and cupboard constructions of different kinds, etc. The purpose of the invention is to direct the spray heads in said spaces one after the other, say in a series, so that a spray head behind sprays towards the next spray head in front.
In engine rooms of ships, the spray heads are preferably positioned in a circle around the engine.
By directing the spray heads one after the other, fog streams from the individual spray heads will strengthen each other and simultaneously secure a neces¬ sary availability of air behind and close to each spray head, so that it is possible, according to what is wished, to achieve strong fog streams having a high ca¬ pacity to penetrate and carry off. For this purpose, the spray heads may preferably be constructed according to what is set forth in the International Patent Applica- tion PCT/FI92/00155.
In the following, the invention will be de¬ scribed in greater detail with reference to an embodi¬ ment shown in the attached Figure 1.
In Figure 1, an engine room is indicated by reference numeral 1, the engine room floor is indicated by 2, a bilge space below the floor is indicated by 3, and the engine in question, e.g. a diesel engine, is indicated by 4. Up to the ceiling of the engine room are positioned a number of sprinklers or spray heads 5 and on the floor level are arranged a number of spray heads and/or sprinklers 6 directed upwards and a number of nozzle heads 7 directed downwards, into the bilge space 3.
A drive unite for delivering extinguishing liquid and/or extinguishing gas is indicated by 8. An outgoing liquid line 9 of the drive unit 8 can be con¬ nected selectively to different fire zones; the engine room 1 constitutes a fire zone comprising a feederline 10 to the spray heads 5 at the ceiling of the engine room and a branching 11 to the spray heads 6, 7 at the engine room floor 2.
The drive unit 8 comprises two pressure gas containers 12 and 13 having an initial charging pressure of e.g. 200 bar and automatically or manually control- Iable outlet valves for leading pressure gas into and driving extinguishing liquid out of two liquid contain¬ ers 14 through the line 9. The pressure gas containers 12 can be constituted by so-called standard gas bottles. The extinguishing liquid from the containers 14 is ar- ranged to flow into the line 9 via a valve 15, the open¬ ing of which effected by the liquid pressure is, how¬ ever, counteracted by a liquid cylinder 16 arranged in connection with the pressure of the propellent gas, in combination with a throttle 17, as will be described in more detail below.
A common outlet line 18 of the propellent gas containers 12 and 13 is connected via a pressure reduc¬ ing valve 21 adjustable for 10 bar, besides to the li¬ quid containers 14, also to a low-pressure water pump 19, 20, whereby 19 indicates a pneumatic driving motor for the actual water pump 20 having an operating pres¬ sure of e.g. about 16 bar. Alternatively, it is possible to use a low-pressure pump of another kind, e.g. a double-acting piston pump. The pump 20 sucks water from a sweet-water container via a line 22 or e.g. sea or lake water, alternatively. The water is filtered by means of filters 23 and 24 to a particle level of 10 μ, for instance. Occurring variations in pressure may be balanced by means of an accumulator not shown in Figure 1.
Figure 1 shows the equipment ready for being used. The pressure bottles 12 and 13 are filled with propellent gas, having a pressure of e.g. 200 bar, and the liquid bottles 14 are filled with water, as is the liquid cylinder 16, the filled liquid space of which is indicated by 25. A spring 27, which may be relatively weak, keeps the spindle 26 of the valve 15 in the shown position closing the valve.
When a fire is detected, one of the propellent gas containers, e.g. the container 12, is switched on at first, whereby the gas strives to drive the liquid out of the containers 14 via the valve 15 to the outlet line 9, 10 by pressing up the valve spindle 26 from the position of Figure 1 under the influence of the liquid pressure.
However, the same gas pressure also acts on a membrane 28 of the liquid cylinder 16, which membrane may also be a piston, and therefore presses the liquid 25 out partly via the throttle 17 and a subsequent non- return valve 29 into the line 9, but partly also towards the spindle 26 of the valve 15 against the effect of the liquid pressure from the containers 14. As shown sche¬ matically in the drawing, by making the spindle 26 sur¬ face affected by the pressure of the cylinder liquid 25 larger than the spindle 26 surface affected by the equally high pressure of the extinguishing liquid of the containers 14, e.g. in the proportion 2,5:1, the valve 15 will remain closed until the liquid 25 has been pressed out of the cylinder 16 entirely and its pressure has subsequently sunk via the throttle 17 to about 40 bar in the present example case, whereby the extinguish¬ ing liquid is able to press away the spindle 26 of the valve 15.
During the just-described initial stage, the length of which may be adjusted as desired by means of the throttle 17, the pressure gas drives, however, via the line 18 and the pressure reducing valve 21 the pump 20 delivering liquid via its outlet line 30, having the filter 24 and a non-return valve 31 after filler branch- ing to the containers 14, to the outlet line 9 of the drive unit 8 over the non-return valves 29 and 31, for an initial cooling of at least the spray heads 5 and the parts of the line 10 which extend in the engine room 1. The pressure of the cylinder liquid 25 after the throttle 17 is lower than the outlet pressure of the pump 20. Additionally, the pneumatic motor 19 can deliver gas via an outlet line 32 to the nozzles 7 in the bilge space 3 of the engine room 1.
Upon opening the valve 15, the driving of the extinguishing liquid out of the containers 14 will begin and the pump 20 stops when the non-return valves 29 and 31 are closed. Excess liquid pressed by the valve 15 into the line space around the throttle 17 is allowed to flow out through an overflow valve 33, which may be adjusted for e.g. 16 bar. The gas container 12 and the liquid containers 14 can be dimensioned for instance in such a way that, with the containers 14 emptied of li¬ quid, a gas pressure of about 80 bar prevails in them and in the container 12. Gas will then continue flowing out after the liquid through the line 9 until the pres- sure has sunk so much that the pressure in the space around the throttle 17 is able to close the valve 15. If the last-mentioned pressure is about 16 bar, the valve 15 is closed at a pressure of about 40 bar in the containers 14, and subsequently, the remaining gas in the containers 12 and 14 continues driving the pump 20. The pump 20 now refills the containers 14 with water. If the overflow valve 33 is adjusted to a value somewhat higher than the outlet pressure of the pump 20, liquid is delivered also to the outlet line 9 exactly in the same way as during the initial stage described previously, and simultaneously, the cylinder 16 is re¬ filled with water. When the containers 14 have been filled, the procedure can be repeated by switching on the other pressure gas c rtainer 13.
Both during the initial stage and during the liquid filling stage, the pneumatic motor 19 can also deliver propellent gas, say nitrogen or argon gas, via a gas line 32 extending from the motor 19 and via the nozzles 7 to the bilge space 3 of the engine room.
According to the invention, the nozzles 7 in the bilge space are directed one after the other, as shown by an arrow 40 as far as the left nozzle 7 is concerned. A further nozzle indicated by an arrow 41 may be positioned between the left and the right nozzle in the Figure. The nozzle 7 on the right side in the Figure may be directed into the plane of the drawing; all nozzles 7 in the bilge space constitute preferably a circle around the engine 4. The same principle may preferably be applied also to other kinds of narrow and winding spaces.

Claims (3)

Claims:
1. A method for fighting fire, especially for fire-fighting in engine rooms of ships and similar spaces, c h a r a c t e r i z e d in that nozzles, sprinklers or spray heads positioned in a bilge space (3) of an engine room are directed one after the other (40, 41).
2. A method according to claim 1, c h a r - a c t e r i z e d in that the nozzles, sprinklers or spray heads positioned in the bilge space (3) of the engine room are arranged one after the other (40, 41) in a circle around an inflammable object, e.g. a diesel engine (4).
3. A method according to claim 1, c h a r ¬ a c t e r i z e d in that nozzles, sprinklers or spray heads are directed one after the other also in other narrow spaces.
AU77011/94A 1993-10-01 1994-10-03 Method for fighting fire Ceased AU680300C (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
FI934340 1993-10-01
FI934340A FI934340A0 (en) 1993-10-01 1993-10-01 FOERFARANDE FOER ELDSLAECKNING
PCT/FI1994/000442 WO1995009677A1 (en) 1993-10-01 1994-10-03 Method for fighting fire

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
AU7701194A AU7701194A (en) 1995-05-01
AU680300B2 AU680300B2 (en) 1997-07-24
AU680300C true AU680300C (en) 1998-04-23

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