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Charles Momsen Charles Momsen is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Sep 2008
Posts: 480
Default Seamanship Question# #40


"Bart" wrote in message
...
On Oct 15, 3:05 pm, "Charles Momsen" wrote:
"Bart" wrote in message

...

What safety gear would you have near a propane
stove in the galley?


1 pt


1. Master shut off valve for propane.
2. Fire hood.
3. Cover for stove.
4. CO detector.
5. Vent fan.
6. Fire extinguisher located near exit.
7. Heavy duty oven mitts or M-60 barrel changing mitts.
8. Halon or purple K in a can/small bucket/bottle.
9. Propane leak detector.


Can you explain what a fire hood is?

A firehood is used to contain flames and heat. There are many types for many
different applications. Next time you are in Home Depot or any of the big
box stores look up at the ceiling. You'll see something like curtains or
barriers about every 30 feet or so. This is to stop heat, flames and
pyrolysis gases from spreading along the underside of the ceiling. Steel
weakens considerably under heat, so the intent of the curtains/hood is to
limit the structural failure to a small area. You see the same principle in
platform framed houses with fire blocks (cats) installed halfway up inside
the wall between the studs (it looks like a horizontal stiffener).
Restaurants have them above the stove, it doubles as an exhaust hood and
looks like a big stainless steel funnel. In the case of a boat, a firehood
would look like a normal kitchen style exhaust hood but a bit deeper and
would not allow flames to escape around the sides, flames and heat go up
into the hood and not onto nearby wood, fabric, maps, etc. The proper name
for the thing is probably something other than firehood. The thing just
slows down the spread of a fire, hopefully enough to allow people to escape
and give time to fight the source of the flames.

Most boat galleys:

http://tinyurl.com/6df9bv

Are a conflagaration waiting to happen. Feeding stoves with pressurized gas
(propane) is really asking for it.