Survival Gear Source, survival gear, disaster kits, emergency food, emergency preparedness, MREs
FREE OFFER TERMS
POTASSIUM IODIDE DOSAGE INFO
PRINTABLE PDFs
Deluxe Survival Kit Survival Kits 72 hr. Survival Kit 72 Hour Survival Kit Emergency Survival Kits Children’s Survival Kit Office Survival Kit Classroom Lockdown Kit Emergency Survival Supplies Disaster Kits Office Emergency Kits MREs Mountain House Foods Survival Food Emergency Water Water Purification Water Filtration Bottle Water Purification Bottle Survival Information Emergency Flashlights Emergency Shelter Terrorism Supplies First Aid Supplies Pet Survival Kit Potassium Iodide Survival Articles Survival Supplies Swine Flu Swine Flu Kits Pandemic Kits
* Class A extinguishers are for ordinary combustible materials such as paper, wood, cardboard, and most plastics. The numerical rating on these types of extinguishers indicates the amount of water it holds and the amount of fire it can extinguish.
* Class B fires involve flammable or combustible liquids such as gasoline, kerosene, grease and oil. The numerical rating for class B extinguishers indicates the approximate number of square feet of fire it can extinguish.
* Class C fires involve electrical equipment, such as appliances, wiring, circuit breakers and outlets. Never use water to extinguish class C fires - the risk of electrical shock is far too great! Class C extinguishers do not have a numerical rating. The C classification means the extinguishing agent is non-conductive.
* Class D fire extinguishers are commonly found in a chemical laboratory. They are for fires that involve combustible metals, such as magnesium, titanium, potassium and sodium. These types of extinguishers also have no numerical rating, nor are they given a multi-purpose rating - they are designed for class D fires only.