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Carbonated fire extinguisher

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We have CO2 fire extinguishers, we have water fire extinguishers, why not combine the two and make a carbonated water fire extinguisher! It would have a lot more range than water alone, and would last longer than CO2 alone. This was inspired by stories of a guy using shaken bottles of Pepsi Max to put out spot fires when the mains water failed.
simonj, Feb 17 2009

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       //It would have a lot more range than water alone//   

       ...Ackshully, I think this might not be the case. One advantage to water extinguishers is the stream does a reasonably good job of staying together, much because of the nozzle design and largely laminar flow. If the water were carbonated, I'm sure this would cause it to de-carbonate as it comes out the nozzle (commensurate with the pressure drop). By "fizzing" as it comes out of the nozzle, it'd break up the stream, and I beleive the stream wouldn't have nearly the same range.   

       ...or then agian I could be wrong.
Custardguts, Feb 18 2009
  

       The old soda-acid fire extinguishers generate CO2 to pressurise water.   

       I'm sure your idea has been partly baked in the form of using a soda syphon as an impromptu extinguisher.
spidermother, Feb 18 2009
  

       ... so why does the can of pop explode when you shake it up ?
FlyingToaster, Feb 22 2009
  
      
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