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JULY, AUGUST, SEPTEMBER
NEWSLETTER BY VINCENT DUNN
REKINDLE
FIRES
Rekindle" is a dirty word in
the fire service. A rekindle is a term used by firefighters to describe a blaze
that re-ignites after they leave a scene. It describes a situation where after
salvage and overhaul have been completed and a blaze is officially declared
extinguished, firefighters go back to the firehouse and are later called back
to the burning building to again fight the re-ignited fire. Sometimes, the
second fire is much larger than the first. And worse yet, sometimes the second
fire kills people who assumed the first fire was extinguished.
A rekindled fire is an
indicator of a poor firefighting operation. Fire chiefs and fire officers have
been subject to legal action, and in some instances forced to resign, when in
command of a blaze that was officially declare extinguished, but after leaving
the scene, it re-ignited. A rekindle is a nightmare of chiefs, officers and
firefighters.
Firefighters perform
overhauling operations to prevent a rekindle after they leave the scene.
Frequently, we are criticized unfairly for damaging a person's house or
business because we must insure the fire is not smoldering in concealed spaces
or furnishings. Firefighters with pike poles, pry bars and axes must break open
plaster walls, pull apart mattresses and throw out smoldering stuffed chairs.
We cut up expensive floors and roofs after a fire has been extinguished to
insure the blaze does not reignite.
Every
member is responsible during the salvage and overhauling operations to insure a
rekindle does not occur. This is an important team responsibility of
firefighting. I learned this years ago, after extensive salvage and overhaul
operations in a restaurant - a kitchen grease duct fire that had a chimney was
running up the walls of a high-rise office building. After a survey of the
scene, a battalion chief and I agreed a fire in the duct was extinguished. And
over the portable radio we ordered the last engine and ladder company inside
the building to "take-up." A veteran firefighter came to the command
post and heatedly insisted to us the fire was still smoldering in the grease
duct. He said he could still detect heat coming out of the grease duct chimney
flue up on the roof. He was right. We did more overhauling and prevented a
rekindle; that firefighter saved reputations that night-including mine.
After
a serious blaze, chiefs, company officers and firefighters are exposed to many
physical discomforts. They may be soaking wet, freezing cold, have headaches
and be exhausted from the exertion of firefighting. There may be emotional
discomforts as well. They may be frustrated or angered by events surrounding
the fire, the strategy, the tactics, or because one or more of their comrades
have been injured. Discomforts and emotions caused by the after-effects of
firefighting can interfere with decision-making judgment during salvage and
overhauling. Time becomes more important than looking for smoldering embers.
Everyone subconsciously wants to return to the firehouse for dry clothes, a
meal and some rest. "Get it done and let's get back to quarters" can
often be heard during overhauling.
What Materials Smolder & Rekindle
Veteran fire officers know what types of materials are difficult to fully extinguish and are susceptible to rekindling. They have passed down to us how to conduct an effective overhaul operation in smoldering material-al and how to prevent a fire from reigniting after we leave the scene.
Burned and smoldering
mattresses, bedding
material and stuffed chairs are the materials that are the most difficult to extinguish fully. They
can smolder inside the box frame and the mattress, then flame up hours later.
Also, the inside of a cushioned chair can sometimes be hollow and contain air
that can keep a fire smoldering for hours. The exterior surfaces of much
stuffed bedding and many stuffed chairs are coated and designed to prevent the
penetration of liquids. A stain-resistant coating intended to repel spilled
liquids will also prevent penetration of water from a hose stream used during
overhauling from getting to a deep-seated hot spot of a smoldering fire.
The danger of rekindle is so great that firefighters often remove a mattress or stuffed chair from the fire building even after it is quenched with water during overhauling. The mattress or stuffed chair is taken to the street and quenched under a hydrant outlet or a waiting booster line stream.
Foam cushioning is another material that
can conceal a smoldering fire. Foam mattresses, pillows and seat cushions
contain small air pockets in which fire may get oxygen for smoldering
combustion. In some instances, the foam is a plastic material that contains in
its air pocket highly flammable hydrocarbon residue.
Ordinary clothing, when hanging in a closet, can conceal a
smoldering fire. Pockets of air between the layers of clothing and the added
problem of plastic covering over clothing from a dry cleaner increases the
chance of a smoldering fire going unnoticed. Burned clothing must be removed
from the closet, pulled apart and wet by a hose stream. When it is being
removed from the closet during overhaul, the smoldering clothing may flare up,
revealing the rekindle danger.
Clothing in drawers of a piece of burned, charred and smoking furniture
must be examined for smoldering fire during overhauling. When flames burn a piece of furniture and
char the clothing inside the drawers, any blackened and burned folded clothing
must be removed from the drawers, pulled apart and wet with a hose line.
Piles of burned and charred cardboard,
newspapers and rags must be pulled apart by
firefighters and the insides wet with a hose stream. All cardboard contains
pockets of air. Newspaper and rags, when folded and placed in piles, contain
tiny air spaces that let a fire smolder without visible signs on the outside.
Charred and partially burned stacks of cardboard, paper and rags, especially those tied with wire in
large bales, must be opened, pulled apart and the inside quenched with water to
prevent a rekindle. Overhauling in stacks of cardboard and papers is long
operation patience is required to prevent a rekindle.
Rubbish in the cellar storage bins at the bottom
of compactor chutes is another rekindle
hazard. During overhauling in compactor or incinerator rubbish, the refuse must
be pulled from the storage bin onto the cellar floor, separated and wet down
with large quantities of water to insure fire extinguishment.
Concealed spaces in the vicinity of a fire must be carefully
examined during over-hauling for smoldering fire. The most common concealed
spaces to be opened up and examined for hidden fire during overhauling are the
ceiling above a fire and a window frame. After a chair or mattress fire is
extinguished, the fast information a fire chief wants to know is whether the
fire and heat spread to the ceiling space above the burned furnishing. It is
opened with a pike pole. Firefighters must open up the plaster ceiling until
they reach a space where there is no sign of char or burning.
When a room-and-contents blaze becomes so large,
and hot, that it has melted the glass, and flames flow out of the window,
chances are great the fire has spread into the cracks around the window frame
and into the concealed space around the top and sides of the window. This
concealed space may contain combustible material and smolder.
Inside the concealed space around a window there
may be combustible rope attached to window weights for the up-and-down window
mechanism. Also found smoldering in this concealed space may
be wood shavings, paper, or combustible insulation. This material-al may have
caught fire from the flame burning out the window and it could smolder inside this concealed space after the fire is
extinguished. When
the window frame is charred and this is suspected, the inside framing around
the window is removed during overhauling to expose any hidden fire. Using a
pike pole from inside the room, a firefighter first removes the top molding
over the window. Then, the window frame molding is pulled from the wall. A
clear view of the concealed space around the window will be available for water
from the hose stream. In some instances where there may be a deep-seated
smoldering fire in a rotting windowsill, that too may have to be removed to
prevent a rekindle.
Grease inside a duct can continue to burn and rekindle when hose
streams are directed from the roof above down through the duct or when the
stream directed upward from the kitchen does not reach and fully cool down the
burning grease. A rekindle in a grease duct often takes place at the point
where a vertical chimney changes direction and becomes a horizontal section. If
this is not cleaned properly, large accumulations of grease can build up at the
duct's horizontal section. If there is no opening for cleaning the duct at this
point, cut open up the duct and examine if fire is suspected.
Cellar oil fires from defective burner units can be easily extinguished with foam or a fog
nozzle, but after firefighters leave the scene a more serious fire may occur in
the apartments above due to a rekindle. The heat and flame may have spread
undetected up in to the ceiling space between the cellar and first floor of the
structure. Unless the ceiling above the oil burner is opened up with pike poles
or if a concrete ceiling is carefully examined above, there could be a
rekindle.
One of the most difficult overhauling operations I
had after a fire was extinguished was a cellar oil fire that heated the
concrete ceiling above and spread fire to the floor above. After the oil burner
fire was easily extinguished, we discovered that the fire had heated the
concrete floor and ignited the wood framing of the first floor. We began to cut
open a finished oak floor and the sub-floor. Smoke was seeping up through the
wood as we cut. Fire had spread to wood 2x2 strips of wood embedded in the
concrete above the oil burner. The wood strips were the framing under flooring
for the oak floor. We had to extinguish the fire and pulled up the wood strips
from the concrete. The more of the oak floor we cut open, the more fire and smoke
we discovered. After hours of cutting oak floor and sub-floor, we finally extinguished
the fire. After that experience, I never failed to examine the ceiling and the
floor above during an oil burner fire.
Material discarded in an airshaft during overhauling in a multi-story row house can be a rekindle fire. One of the first lessons a new fire officer learns during the salvage and overhauling operation is to check the bottom of the airshaft after a fire is extinguished. Sometimes, victims trying to escape fire jump out a window and are found at the bottom of a shaft. You do not want to bury a fire victim with rubbish thrown into the shaft during overhauling. During the initial search, check the bottom of the shaft for victims. Before overhauling begins, check the bottom of the airshaft to insure there is not any smoldering fire. After a room-and-contents fire in a structure, pieces of wood and rubble may be discarded in the shaft rather than left in the apartment. It is easier for the building management to remove the rubbish from the shaft bottom through the cellar than from an apartment several floors up. However, before this is done, the bottom of the shaft must be examined to insure there is no fire that will be buried by the material thrown into the shaft. During overhauling, any material thrown into the shaft must be continually wet with a hose stream. And before leaving the scene, the shaft must be thoroughly examined for any sparks or smoldering.
The cellar of a commercial building containing a
large amount of stock is another area prone to
rekindle after a fire. During overhauling in a cellar, a smoldering fire in
tons of paper, boxes or clothing is difficult to extinguish. The confined
cellar may not have space to pull apart the smoldering stock for quenching by a
hose stream. While overhauling smoldering material in a cellar, you cannot
throw the stock out a window or down a shaft. You may not be able to use large
amount of water because it may fill up the cellar if there are no drains.
During overhauling in a cellar fire the tons of stock may have to be carried up
to the street and spread out and wet down. During overhaul after a long,
serious fire in a cellar that contains a large amount of stock, the tendency of
exhausted chiefs, company officers and firefighters will be to take a chance
and not remove the stock. This decision will increase the risk of a rekindle.
Leave a “watch line company” for 24 hours to protect against
rekindle.
Controlled fires in old and historic townhouse fireplaces are another serious rekindle hazard. During the holiday season, fireplaces are used for long periods. Fire sometimes conducts through the hearth floor or back wall of the fireplace to wood floors or wall beams. Fire can spread through cracked bricks or missing mortar in the fireplace structure. The smell of wood burning when fire fighters arrive at a call may be mistaken for a residual odor of burning logs. Instead of causing damage to the house by opening plaster walls, baseboards in the apartment below during a holiday, when the house is full of guests, the inexperienced fire officer may decide not to examine the structural wood around the fireplace. This decision could lead to a more serious rekindle fire when the guests are sleeping. The best decision a fire officer can make is to check for hidden fire in a concealed space. Open up the ceiling below the fireplace. Examine the wood beam and framework around the fireplace hearth. It is best for everyone.
Lessons Learned
1. An action that can
increase overhaul efficiency and reduce the chances of a rekindle is to send
exhausted firefighters who have extinguished the blaze back to the firehouse
and call reserve or mutual aid firefighters to the scene. The fresh fire
fighters will do a more thorough job of salvage and overhaul. There will also
be fewer injuries during this hazardous phase of the operation.
2. Fill up a bathroom sink
or tub in the burned-out house or apartment with water and soak small amounts
of smoldering materials in water.
3. Remove smoldering
mattresses and stuffed chairs to the street, then soak them with water outside.
When safety conditions allow, discard smoldering mattresses and stuffed chairs
out a window instead of carrying them down a stair.
Be careful when removing
smoldering mattresses and stuffed chairs. They have ignited in hallways and
stairs during the carry out. One superintendent of a high-rise apartment house
tried to remove a smoldering couch down to the street in an elevator. As the
elevator descended, the couch flared up due to the fresh air moving through the
elevator for during the descent. The superintendent and the. couch were found
incinerated in the elevator car on the first floor by firefighters when they
arrived.
4. Use a thermal imaging
camera to detect a smoldering fire in a concealed space. All company officers
should be equipped with this important overhauling tool. It can prevent a
rekindle.
5. Set up a "watch
line." Leave a company at the scene with a ready hose line to cool
smoldering materials and a structure that cannot be overhauled due to the
conditions beyond the fire department resources. Large piles of smoldering
rubbish in a town dump or a danger of structural collapse preventing safe
overhauling operations are possible watch line situations.
6. Increase supervision.
Rekindles are more likely to occur when inexperienced chiefs, company officers
and firefighters are overhauling. For example, if members were recently
transferred or assigned to a new, unfamiliar district, they may not be familiar
with the special overhauling techniques for different types of buildings.
Concealed spaces, which must be checked to prevent a rekindle, in a modern
steel and glass, high-rise building, are in different places from the concealed
spaces that must be examined in a wood-frame structure.
Also, different smoldering
content or furnishings require different overhauling techniques. For example,
cotton, polyester, foam rubber, wood, hay, baled paper and coal all have
different smoldering dangers and all require different specific overhauling
techniques. Chiefs, officers and firefighters who are not regularly assigned to
fire companies working at the fire may inadvertently overlook signs of a
rekindle danger that a regularly assigned officer would easily notice. The least
chance of a rekindle happening is at a fire when regular chiefs, company
officers and firefighters are communicating among each other and working
closely together as a team.
Newsletter Questions:
1.
True
or False
A rekindle is most likely
to happen when the regularly assigned firefighters company officers and Chiefs
are working during salvage and overhauling>
Ans._______
2.
Which
one of the following is not a content that usually rekindles after firefighters
leave the scene of a fire?
A.
Clothes
in a closet
B.
Baled
paper
C.
Cushioned
chairs and sofas
D.
Burning
pot on a stove
Ans._______
3.
Which
one of the following is an incorrect procedure when overhauling a smoldering
window frame with a pike pole?
A.
Remove
the top piece of window molding
B.
Next
remove both side pieces of molding
C.
Examine
concealed space for smoldering rope paper or wood shaving
D.
Never
remove the wood window sill
Ans. ________
4.
Which
one of the following is not a method to reduce the chances of a rekindle?
A.
Increase
supervision during salvage and overhauling
B.
Call
fresh firefighters to the scene
C.
Leave
a company with a hose line (watch line)
D.
Finish
overhauling before the firefighters become tired
Ans._______
5.
During
overhauling who should be looking for possible rekindle fires?
A.
Chief
officers only
B.
Chiefs
and company officers only
C.
Chiefs,
company officers and firefighters
D.
None
of the above
Ans._______
Answers: 1. False; 2.
D; 3. D; 4. D; 5. C