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How do you extinguish fire in cargo holds?

Based on the information provided by the detection warnings, flight crew initiate the suppression of any fire by discharge of Halon gas into the affected cargo compartments. Halon is a very effective suppression agent which operates by chemically reacting with the radicals generated by a fire, to inhibit the reaction.



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Fire detection systems are designed to alert flight crew on the cockpit within 1 minute of a fire starting. Based on the information provided by the detection warnings, flight crew initiate the suppression of any fire by discharge of Halon gas into the affected cargo compartments.

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Some of the most common fire causes are electrical faults in cables or connections (especially for reefer units), electrical faults (in the unit, cabin or in the engine compartment), mechanical faults, overheating (in the chassis or in the engine compartment), engine leakage of flammable liquid or ignition in the cargo ...

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So, yes you can survive. Stowing away in the wheel well is almost certain death. Some cargo holds are pressurized and some are not. people have survived in non-pressurized holds and people have died in non-pressurized holds.

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Being trapped inside a baggage compartment during a flight is no picnic. The hold is pressurized. There is plenty of oxygen, but some airline cargo holds are not climate-controlled, Thompson said.

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Based on the information provided by the detection warnings, flight crew initiate the suppression of any fire by discharge of Halon gas into the affected cargo compartments. Halon is a very effective suppression agent which operates by chemically reacting with the radicals generated by a fire, to inhibit the reaction.

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Fires and explosions on board such vessels continue to generate large losses with an incident occurring every 60 days on average. What can be done?

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