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I think I see where some of the contention lies (or maybe not). Reaching
flash point or slightly above doesn't guarantee a flame. Additional heat is still needed to ignite; could be from compression or a spark. Flash point then is the lowest temperature at which the vapor of a combustible liquid CAN be ignited in air. Scout And, there are more than enough things in a diesel engine room to set the vapors to fire. In fact, according to a marine insurance company, other than electrical fire, far and away most inboard boat engine room fires are on diesel boats. The damned things overheat and just keep on running and running and running, setting things on fire thus triggering the Halon fire extingusher which kills the fire but not the diesel engine which keeps on overheating and restarting the fires. Spray some diesel fuel around the overheated engine room and the boat burns to the waterline, the passengers in the water trying to swim away from the burning fuel flowing towards them. whore vath thinks a diesel engine can't set a boat on fire, but he won't even bother to look at the insurance company facts listed a couple days ago in this very thread. "JAXAshby" wrote in message ... of course, rickie jetcap comic book reader. I bow to your superior knowledge. Of course diesel fuel at or above its flash point is incapable of burning. It doesn't work that way in a diesel engine for sure. There are little green elves inside a diesel engine pushing the pistons up and down with the help of reindeer. From: jetcap Date: 12/25/2004 11:01 AM Eastern Standard Time Message-id: JAXAshby wrote: once the damned stuff gets beyond its flash point it catches fire, Wanna work on that one for a while ... you got a lot of work to do before you can call - anyone - stupid. Rick |
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