Seeing these comments all over YT; they must have tweaked the algorithm. Lots of oddball stuff showing in my recommendations too. In fact last night I watched a 30 minute video on making a sock with a vintage stitcher machine (in home), pretty cool really.....
I love how they went in,I’ve never had a bubble bath in my 24 years of life and plan on taking on tonight,I can’t imagine how much fun they had inside of the foam.
Im a fire alarm installer, and frequently test systems as well. People hate when we come in and make noise for a small amount of time. I can't imagine doing this regularly.
It’s not a small amount of time. Y’all take all fucking day. That’s why the apartment people have to send out emails warning people that it will indeed take all day.
Ive been involved in one of these. It does indeed take all day At least a hundred times the alarms are triggered. I wish they could do that shit silently. Test the bells once and then dont activate the sirens each time
@@FennecTECH Depending on the size of the system, it could definitely take all day. Also, when the system is tested, they are often testing both the initiating devices as well as the notification appliances. They need to make sure all of the notification appliances make noise or flash or both, and they can't cover the entire building all at once. Thus, the triggering of the system multiple times.
@@DodgeandGMkiIIingFurdDaiIy you are right, is not the ISO 9001, but you are wrong thinking that ISO doesn't cover this kind of fire extinguishing sistems, actually the ISO 7076 and 6180 cover this matter. I named the most representative one for the purpose of making a joke, because I don't remember every single one of them...
I saw something like this in a military hanger with plenty of aircraft/choppers in it. Apparently a member of the maintenance crew working on the system at the time accidentally triggered it. By the time it was over, only the tails of the aircraft could still be seen.
I've seen it aswell, apparently they were running a maintenance check, but didn't realise that the system wasn't temporairly shut off which led to a human created malfunction (from the technical part the worker triggered fire supression system while operating on it), accidental tampering and..... ....he came to his childhood bath tub
I love how this is a serious safety measure and these grown men are all giggling like toddlers in their first bubble bath. Lmao that’s awesome. I would too.
I’ve said this before, but I was the installer of what was recorded here. I appreciate the fact that all points recorded the testing, but this was a job completed by rh jones and son mechanical in Prince George, there was a group of us on my crew that worked hard over a tight time frame to accomplish this job.
Hi Aviation Inspector here. You absolutely DO NOT want to be in a hangar like these guys when foam goes off. In fact, we had a guy suffocate to death a couple of years ago in that foam.
***** because last time i saw this happen with a plane in the hanger it ruined about $500,000 worth of avionics computers, not to mention that stuff is really corrosive
***** If you're gonna be a smartass, at least try to be smart. EVERYTHING has chemicals in it. Water is a chemical. The air you are breathing right now is chemicals. Chemicals are not inherently bad or dangerous. The guys in the video, who are presumably trained to work with these "chemicals", have no problem sticking their bare hands in it, so it can't be that big of a deal. The guy who ran into the foam in a suit was likely only wearing the suit to keep his clothes from getting messy. He didn't even have a mask on to cover his face, just safety goggles to protect his eyes and a hood to keep the shit out of his hair.
Expandol. You gotta love it even if it is clastogenic. You can swap it out for bubble bath if it's going to be used for a foam party but it will not hold the water in the foam as well. Expandol holds a great deal of the water and as the foam breaks down it turns into a shaving foam consistency which is scoop-able making it easier to plow it out of a building if you can't wait for it to break down or if you don't want so much water draining into your building.
When I was young, I never knew what these things were used for. 5 years later, I finally come to realize that it’s used for extinguishing a plane when it’s on fire.
12 years later the class action lawsuit for the Navy shows this stuff is a carcinogenic... The things we did without a care because we didn't know any better.
i once went to a kids bday party where the dad who was a firefighter used a foam dispenser connected to the truck, made a huge puddle of foam covering their entire backyard, was a lot of fun and safe to the skin. it just rlly irritates the eyes if you aren't careful.
As an aircraft mechanic I always wonder what it would be like to have this system go off and your inside the wing of a jumbo jet where getting out takes several seconds depending on how far in your in and how flexible you are. You make it out and the foam maybe is already like 2-3ft high depending how close you are to the area it falls. Be interesting.
@@bobmarley2140 Not if you're an experienced mechanic it's sometimes not. In the perfect world human life couldn't be valued, sadly this isn't, so some human tend has more value than some others depending on their background and such, and it'd be very stupid of that said company to estimate that the person who'll likely perish will always has low enough value to brush it off as nothing but a small loss. Because when the time comes and apparently someone of high value are likely to die. I believe one or two jets going ablaze wouldn't concern the company as much as the loss of that said person.
This is like the alarm you hear in your dream even tho you unplugged it and punched it but it still keeps ringing. Then you realize it was a dream and wake up then turn off your real alarm
I have ignored that 'EERRRT EERRRT EERRRT' bog standard electric alarm clock sound in my sleep. Like, I literally, in the dream, started tearing electronics apart to make it stop. I hate that sound with every fiber of my being, to the point Ive had to warn people to NEVER wake me up with that sound......because I will become violent and no power on this earth will make me feel regret for what might happen. Ever. Period. Something will become airborne, in their direction, and if it connects, they better hope it makes that fucking sound stop too, because I wont until it does...... Even talking about it has raised my blood pressure...... My mortal enemy is not a person, it is a sound......
In the Swedish airforce it was one hangar per division of fighter jets. Every evening the hangar-dogs was let into the hangars. Microphones was in the hangar and the central guard could hear everything. If the dogs would start to bark as crazy the hangar was filled with foam (as in this movie) in order to stop fire and all else.
I tested the first B-1 Hangers at Dyess AFB in Texas in 1985 for the arrival of the first Air Force B-1's. They were huge handers with Deck Guns and Infrared Detectors. It was a hoot!
What is the make up of the foam used? Is it AFFF? I work for a sanitation district and the neighboring military based had that stuff spill and it made it to our pump stations. We had to wear full hazmat gear cleaning that stuff because apparently it can cause cancer. We then had to pump it into mobile storage tanks and have it transported all the way to Georgia because they were the only disposal company that would take it.
All fire fighting foam is AFFF in which contains PFAS. And these personnel don’t have any idea of the hazardous spill they have created in the name of an exercise.
@chefdan87 Agreed. But 12 years ago or more AFFF not containing PFAS did not exist. So, we’re talking 12 years or even more as this video depicts. It’s exactly the reason DOD stopped the use of AFFF in training exercises. 33 States are in the process of banning the use of AFFF in training exercises. And 12 States have banned AFFF in which contains PFAS. There is no need to activate the dispersal, when hydrostatic testing can be accomplished to test the pressurization of the FSC. The U.S. Air Force has also banned all AFFF from its installations as well, regardless if contains the presence of PFAS or not.
Dont worry it only takes 2 minutes for the foam to reach the fire. Edit: Everyone needs to stop being the “actually” guy. Its a joke, laugh, slap a like then continue on your comment scrolling adventure. Good day.
@@fender10g Nope, commissioning mean final testing to prove that it perform as specified by the client. And there is no foam in the pipes. It can be premixed "soapy" water, or some have a water line and a "soap" line. The foam itself is made by the unit on the ceiling. To get more foam you need to replace the units by bigger ones, you can't crank up the pressure.
Most fire are actually quite slow to propagate, and the foam system is not to kill the fire, that is only secondary. The primary purpose is to limit the spread of the fire and limit the damages. Same with sprinkler system. They are not made or designed to extinguish the fire, but to limit the spreading. For example, a garbage fire under a desk, the sprinkler will never reach the fire, but will soak the walls and floor and the desk, and the fire will be contained under the desk and won't be able to spread anywhere.
Moon Leah yes you would. The foam is designed to provide sufficent air molecules that you can breath it. Although it tastes terrible, you can actually survive being submered in High Expansion Foams. This is taken into consideration when engineering the product.
Tell that to the guy who died at Eglin AFB back in 2012...the bells go off at the before the foam starts to give you time to evacuate. Definitely not designed to allow you to breathe in it.
I like how it almost took a full minute before actually doing anything substantial. Couple that with ~30 seconds to notice a fire, react, and get to an alarm, and you've got a huge fireball that will likely engulf other planes
Thats the "PEOPLE, WE'RE ABOUT TO BLOW A LOAD ALL UP IN THIS BITCH' alarm. You dont want to activate the foam system with people still under it. This is to suppress a hanger fire until the on site fire brigade shows up, not to save a single plane. Assume any thing recoverable from said hanger was a chance of luck.
Idk if this is any different than the foam fire suppressant in our hangars on base but this is usually highly toxic and is dangerous to be stuck in. Like it poisons the water supply if seeped into the ground and is an all around nightmare if its triggered.
If this is anything like AFFF (aqueous film forming foam), it is highly toxic and carcinogenic for absorption and inhalation. Not to mention it is extremely toxic to the environment and is a hazmat emergency as well.
Imagine these foam cannons at a nightclub and you're high on MDMA. You could play that alarm as a song, and nobody would be sober enough to notice. They might even enjoy it. 😃
1:30 must have been an awesome experience (in the suit!). IT'S LIKE A GIANT BUBBLE BATH, only not a bath and not bubbles... and not meant to be swam in in the first place.
Little bit slow response at first, I assume the sprinkler lines were dry lines before activation - then wholly shit - lots of foam!! Great job.....now who's gonna clean up that mess and how?
I saw another video of this getting cleaned up. Its a mix of lettign the foam die down on its own and spraying it down with water. Then they have a bunch of guys with squeegee brooms push all the liquid out the hangar door to the trench drains
@@whitetacoma04 Right on dude! I did a PFOS mitigation status tour of Andrews AFB in October and the revisionist fire suppression systems they're using to eliminate use of fire suppression chems with PFOS.
@@whitetacoma04 Where I work we have big warehouses that store chemicals, we have a fire system like this and powerful water jets in some buildings. The whole thing is built so if it goes off, all the water or foam or liquid etc can be moved into huge ‘ponds’ on site so it can be collected and taken away and disposed off safely. As opposed to just dumping it into the river of drains. Best way to do it I think.
I don't know why I was recommended this 7 year after. But that's not a bad thing.
same
Seeing these comments all over YT; they must have tweaked the algorithm.
Lots of oddball stuff showing in my recommendations too.
In fact last night I watched a 30 minute video on making a sock with a vintage
stitcher machine (in home), pretty cool really.....
I was mad TH-cam recommended it but now I'm entertained
Me too
My god I’m glad too
I wonder, what's worse: burning in fire, suffocating in foam or cleaning this up.
Julius Bernotas All at once
+Julius Bernotas neither
+Julius Bernotas It's foam. It DISSOLVES
+Une licorne / Nicolasdarkdark Does that mean that you can not apply foam on a rainy day onto a runway?
+hawkeye0248 Salt and
I remember watching this 10 years ago and being so fascinated and I just remembered it again now.. still fascinating
Do you still remember?
"Shut her down"
*System freezes and continues to produce more foam*
"AH CANT HOLD 'ER, CAP'N!
Oh damn oh damn oh damn....... Makes for a good adult cartoon
Now play the intro of half life when the experiment goes wrong. ." Shutting down....shutting down....it wont shut down....IT WONT SHUT DOWN..."
Legend has it that it’s still pumping out foam to this day.
Shiiit...
someone should answer that phone
+klausnikski someone should answer that foam
You did it. YOu made the best pun.
Once upon a Time in America.
klausnikski ok hold on
*picks up* FUCK ITS A WRONG NUMBER AND WE WAITED SO LONG
klausnikski lol
I love how they went in,I’ve never had a bubble bath in my 24 years of life and plan on taking on tonight,I can’t imagine how much fun they had inside of the foam.
how was it?
@@untitled2792 really fun, it had made my night better :)
This foam is cancerous
@@ojleo7428 If its AFFF. There are replacements out for it now. But by the age of this video theres a good chance it is AFFF.
@@chefdan87 Whats AFFF?
Im a fire alarm installer, and frequently test systems as well.
People hate when we come in and make noise for a small amount of time.
I can't imagine doing this regularly.
It’s not a small amount of time. Y’all take all fucking day. That’s why the apartment people have to send out emails warning people that it will indeed take all day.
Ive been involved in one of these. It does indeed take all day At least a hundred times the alarms are triggered. I wish they could do that shit silently. Test the bells once and then dont activate the sirens each time
@@FennecTECH Depending on the size of the system, it could definitely take all day. Also, when the system is tested, they are often testing both the initiating devices as well as the notification appliances. They need to make sure all of the notification appliances make noise or flash or both, and they can't cover the entire building all at once. Thus, the triggering of the system multiple times.
@@ShaunPuzon indeed. But in my building. They would use smoke to trigger every single sensor. Setting the damn thing off hundreds of times in a day
Why are Snow coming out in there?
I hate it when the phone rings when I am taking a bubble bath.
Trump 2020
@@32SQUID What about Trump? Is new election coming to US again?
@@0hjaa3.06 typically every four years we have a presidential election.
Right
Oh yea
i like how the alarm gives a countdown before the suppression system activates
like it actually does
Legend says that the janitor is still cleaning it
Its foam it dissolves
LimeCinemas foam dissolves to liquid on its on.
Live From The Gutter Nah, hes still cleaning it
SansYT15 r/whooooosh
@@Nattidaddy so now there is a bunch of liquid on the floor right
This test is not properly conducted the ISO 9001 says you need:
1 DJ
5+/-1 strippers
1 disco ball
Adrian Sanchez, as another Sanchez this all checks out
Adrian Sanchez English please!?!?
@@abkh7777 shuttup idiot
ISO has nothing to do with safety only supplier quality and process. This would fall under OSHA
@@DodgeandGMkiIIingFurdDaiIy you are right, is not the ISO 9001, but you are wrong thinking that ISO doesn't cover this kind of fire extinguishing sistems, actually the ISO 7076 and 6180 cover this matter.
I named the most representative one for the purpose of making a joke, because I don't remember every single one of them...
I finally found the video after so long. It has been 7-9 years since i last watched it.
I saw something like this in a military hanger with plenty of aircraft/choppers in it. Apparently a member of the maintenance crew working on the system at the time accidentally triggered it. By the time it was over, only the tails of the aircraft could still be seen.
😆
poor guy
Same
I've seen it aswell, apparently they were running a maintenance check, but didn't realise that the system wasn't temporairly shut off which led to a human created malfunction (from the technical part the worker triggered fire supression system while operating on it), accidental tampering and.....
....he came to his childhood bath tub
They were so fired! 😂
Welcome to another video of Lets Put A Video From A Long Time Ago In Peoples Recommendations
Loel Azarcon I’m not complaining
I watched this about 4 years ago with a different channel
Welcome to another comment by people who still think upload date has anything to do with recommendations.
Loel Azarcon lol
Loel who arebhai uou
Who would knew that people have so much fun testing stuff
Yeah, who would knew?
I love how this is a serious safety measure and these grown men are all giggling like toddlers in their first bubble bath. Lmao that’s awesome. I would too.
@Game Plays 1230 you must be fun at parties
@Game Plays 1230 i dont want to hear that coming from someone with an ironic username.
@Game Plays 1230 cornball
Good ol Pfas!
Ball sackk
Who is the lucky one who has to tidy this up?
rip
I believe that, like most foams, it becomes a regular liquid after a while.
th-cam.com/video/lK8IIRZ4Q80/w-d-xo.html I'd do it! looks like it's actually fun!
maybe a year
The fire department. The foam can be cleaned with water.
I’ve said this before, but I was the installer of what was recorded here. I appreciate the fact that all points recorded the testing, but this was a job completed by rh jones and son mechanical in Prince George, there was a group of us on my crew that worked hard over a tight time frame to accomplish this job.
Dope. Was PG as big of a festering racist shthole back then as it is today?
**janitor has left the chat**
Hahaha
Collin Chesney this should be higher 😂
Dax joined the chat
*Janitors 1-24 left the server.*
Janitor: I ain’t getting paid enough for this shit!
Good luck to fire fighters trying to find the guy that passed out from the fire.
Keeps the planes from exploding can catching the rest of the hangers on fire.
it protects the bank balance of the aircraft owner
@@andrewmurphy5310 or prevents the highly flammable jet fuel from exploding…
Better to find an unconscious burnt person than a dead burnt person
Don‘t know the permeability to IR of foam but that would be a way
Hi Aviation Inspector here. You absolutely DO NOT want to be in a hangar like these guys when foam goes off. In fact, we had a guy suffocate to death a couple of years ago in that foam.
You wouldnt want a false alarm .
***** because last time i saw this happen with a plane in the hanger it ruined about $500,000 worth of avionics computers, not to mention that stuff is really corrosive
***** you could throw a party
ok
Holy fuck imagine that XD
*****
If you're gonna be a smartass, at least try to be smart. EVERYTHING has chemicals in it. Water is a chemical. The air you are breathing right now is chemicals. Chemicals are not inherently bad or dangerous.
The guys in the video, who are presumably trained to work with these "chemicals", have no problem sticking their bare hands in it, so it can't be that big of a deal. The guy who ran into the foam in a suit was likely only wearing the suit to keep his clothes from getting messy. He didn't even have a mask on to cover his face, just safety goggles to protect his eyes and a hood to keep the shit out of his hair.
No one wanted to shut it down.
Igneous_is_my_Alias well it's fucking bubbles
No, this is a mandatory test. The foam must activate, be the right compound, and cover a few barrels within a certain amount of time.
Jason Kenneth have you heard of a joke?
they turned off the foam jets.
Now imagine the environmental damage by all the PFAS in that foam.
Better then the jet fuel detonating
@@jameson1239 Actually it depends. Jet fuel is meant to be burnt. It's the shit next to it you don't want to burn.
What I enjoyed here:
100% video
110% comments
well bary, welcom as your first day as cleaner here at the airport. We begin with hangar five.
Ha ha ha.
why do all these people think it's soap my dudes it's toxic chemicals
@@noxious_nights its not toxic they had people running in it but its not soap its foam made to stop fire
foam evaporates of you didnt know
After watching this video 459383 times I van finally conclude that…
This hangar is fire-proof
Providing someone has filled up the tanks again ;)
Expandol. You gotta love it even if it is clastogenic. You can swap it out for bubble bath if it's going to be used for a foam party but it will not hold the water in the foam as well. Expandol holds a great deal of the water and as the foam breaks down it turns into a shaving foam consistency which is scoop-able making it easier to plow it out of a building if you can't wait for it to break down or if you don't want so much water draining into your building.
Never heard an actual bell do a code 3 alarm before!
The bells in code 3 are actually quite common here in Canada.
Sometimes they are set to a coding that is normally ment for single stroke bells
Sounds like a continues speaker strobe and and Edwards code 3 bell
oh look its my old account when i was still into fire alarms
being into fire alarms is a thing?
OMG THIS IS BACK I NEVER WATCHED THIS IN A LONG TIME!❤❤❤
When I was young, I never knew what these things were used for. 5 years later, I finally come to realize that it’s used for extinguishing a plane when it’s on fire.
And now it's been 12 years! Learned anything new since then?
@@larryisntmynamebutyoucanca9625sure did
@@piktureit You've been on TH-cam for quite a while now.
This is why I can't work with airplanes, I'd constantly set everything on fire for foam
ME AND YOU BOTH
12 years later the class action lawsuit for the Navy shows this stuff is a carcinogenic... The things we did without a care because we didn't know any better.
TH-cam recommends exactly what I want...
There's a lot of bubbles, sounds fun...
It is FOAM!
It would be terrifying of it didnt stop and they drowned in foam
Normal name
“He was a good man.. how did he die?”
*Bubbles.. lots and lots of bubbles.*
On eglin afb a guy did die doing this test
They have limited foam ;-;
But it didn't, so it's not
Lol there was 2 big ass doors they can go through.....
Love the sound of the duo tronics on continuous and the bells
Add some lasers, smoke, kickass speakers and disco lights and it's the perfect venue for a rave. 🚥🚥🚥🎉🎉🎉
Put a Big ass Bass Speaker in a Plastic Bag in the Middle and Look what happens.
i once went to a kids bday party where the dad who was a firefighter used a foam dispenser connected to the truck, made a huge puddle of foam covering their entire backyard, was a lot of fun and safe to the skin.
it just rlly irritates the eyes if you aren't careful.
As an aircraft mechanic I always wonder what it would be like to have this system go off and your inside the wing of a jumbo jet where getting out takes several seconds depending on how far in your in and how flexible you are. You make it out and the foam maybe is already like 2-3ft high depending how close you are to the area it falls. Be interesting.
I think this is exactly why the foam system turns on, only after 30ish seconds after fire alarm goes off
@@РостиславГаврилюк-р1г well actually the foam system is tied into the main fire alarm system and by a *Relay Module* it activates the foam system
@@FireTech7 o
mechanics are cheaper to replace than the jet is
@@bobmarley2140 Not if you're an experienced mechanic it's sometimes not. In the perfect world human life couldn't be valued, sadly this isn't, so some human tend has more value than some others depending on their background and such, and it'd be very stupid of that said company to estimate that the person who'll likely perish will always has low enough value to brush it off as nothing but a small loss. Because when the time comes and apparently someone of high value are likely to die. I believe one or two jets going ablaze wouldn't concern the company as much as the loss of that said person.
Finally, I found this video after four years of searching
Are the search terms you use really that awful? 🤣
that must be a fun job
Lol
Until you have to clean it up.
No one cleans it though!
I'm sure it probably just turns to water and drains out
"so what's your job?"
"I make bubbles"
Rocket bubbles
Its foam
this is my childhood these fire supression vids i still love them as much as i did back then
This is like the alarm you hear in your dream even tho you unplugged it and punched it but it still keeps ringing. Then you realize it was a dream and wake up then turn off your real alarm
THATS HAPPENED TO ME BEFORE!!! >:0
Me too, twice
Not me
I have ignored that 'EERRRT EERRRT EERRRT' bog standard electric alarm clock sound in my sleep. Like, I literally, in the dream, started tearing electronics apart to make it stop. I hate that sound with every fiber of my being, to the point Ive had to warn people to NEVER wake me up with that sound......because I will become violent and no power on this earth will make me feel regret for what might happen. Ever. Period. Something will become airborne, in their direction, and if it connects, they better hope it makes that fucking sound stop too, because I wont until it does...... Even talking about it has raised my blood pressure...... My mortal enemy is not a person, it is a sound......
Do these guys even work there? I bet they just wen in to play with the foam!
They are fire equipment testers
Its a mandatory test. The barrels you see in the video are placed to see if the supressant can cover them in less than 2 minutes.
These videos are satisfying, without the alarm
Am I the only one that thinks there should be one more in the middle?
There wont be a airplane in the middle only 2 at the sides
@@Kevin18 I honestly didn't even knew what that was, but the foam was missing there and it didn't look good.
@@Schomyly OCD xD
Loš mi they have parking spots for the planes under even foam producer
I wonder wtf happens when the top of an airplane is on fire, this is not gonna do shit right?
In the Swedish airforce it was one hangar per division of fighter jets. Every evening the hangar-dogs was let into the hangars. Microphones was in the hangar and the central guard could hear everything. If the dogs would start to bark as crazy the hangar was filled with foam (as in this movie) in order to stop fire and all else.
Brings back some memories, by the morning the foam was a slight film on the slab. Didn’t take much time to wash it away with a fire hose
Took less than an hour to clean up
I tested the first B-1 Hangers at Dyess AFB in Texas in 1985 for the arrival of the first Air Force B-1's. They were huge handers with Deck Guns and Infrared Detectors. It was a hoot!
In abilene Tx? I live there
Good to see Aperture Labs using the conversion gel again.
Steven Graham LMAO I get it.
Aperture Labs I know that place
What is the make up of the foam used? Is it AFFF? I work for a sanitation district and the neighboring military based had that stuff spill and it made it to our pump stations. We had to wear full hazmat gear cleaning that stuff because apparently it can cause cancer. We then had to pump it into mobile storage tanks and have it transported all the way to Georgia because they were the only disposal company that would take it.
All fire fighting foam is AFFF in which contains PFAS. And these personnel don’t have any idea of the hazardous spill they have created in the name of an exercise.
@@briankiefer856 That is incorrect, there are in fact non pfas or fluorine free fire fighting foams.
@chefdan87 Agreed. But 12 years ago or more AFFF not containing PFAS did not exist. So, we’re talking 12 years or even more as this video depicts. It’s exactly the reason DOD stopped the use of AFFF in training exercises. 33 States are in the process of banning the use of AFFF in training exercises. And 12 States have banned AFFF in which contains PFAS. There is no need to activate the dispersal, when hydrostatic testing can be accomplished to test the pressurization of the FSC. The U.S. Air Force has also banned all AFFF from its installations as well, regardless if contains the presence of PFAS or not.
1 minute of silence for the persons who clean up all this mess
It actually kinda cleans its self
@@spidercubed9718 not soap, hidrogen🙃
Foam evaporates
Angelo Smiljanić if it was hydrogen it would explode when it hit fire.
I’m pretty sure it just desolves into water.
“Shut her down” - Doesn’t shut it down. 😁👌🏼
check.
ADSMOVIE: OH NO YOU SPILLED MY MILK, YOU KILLED US ALLLLL
NOOOOOOO
Shows this happening
Then shows this:
what are you doing here tank boy?!?!?
Nice, an copied comment!
@DJ ENDIE09 What do you mean by that?
Never thought it will come out that quick
Dont worry it only takes 2 minutes for the foam to reach the fire.
Edit: Everyone needs to stop being the “actually” guy. Its a joke, laugh, slap a like then continue on your comment scrolling adventure. Good day.
It did say "commissioning." it's probably instant the second time around once the pre-foam stuff is in the pipes
@@fender10g Nope, commissioning mean final testing to prove that it perform as specified by the client. And there is no foam in the pipes. It can be premixed "soapy" water, or some have a water line and a "soap" line. The foam itself is made by the unit on the ceiling. To get more foam you need to replace the units by bigger ones, you can't crank up the pressure.
Most fire are actually quite slow to propagate, and the foam system is not to kill the fire, that is only secondary. The primary purpose is to limit the spread of the fire and limit the damages.
Same with sprinkler system. They are not made or designed to extinguish the fire, but to limit the spreading. For example, a garbage fire under a desk, the sprinkler will never reach the fire, but will soak the walls and floor and the desk, and the fire will be contained under the desk and won't be able to spread anywhere.
2 minutes is pretty damn fast
@@tonez2196 not when all I want is instant gratification. I had to watch like 2 mins before anything exciting happened.
Foam party anyone?
XD
Dibs on setting it up!
"Some side effects may occur..." I love it.
Ya!
DarkLight753 qww
Have one to sell? Sell now
Lenovo B590
I loved watching this video in 2015 when I was still in elementary. Idk why but I was obsessed with fire alarms and I LOVED watching this video
Sometimes i think building officials order commissioning tests like these just because they’re awesome 😜
Any safety that is not tested is a failure point.
Another episode of “Why is this on my recommended”
No
Another episode of unoriginal comments
Shut up
just like the day barney died
Idk
Nobody:
How students see the school sprinkler system: 0:50
I wanna see the video on how they get rid of all of it.
Water
Wait till morning
Corey Painter 😂 we have filters for a reason.
itll just evaporate
@@theblackmesaresearchfacili1079and they just have to sweep up the powder
It looks so soft and fluffy! I just wanna jump in!
You wouldn't be able to breathe in there.
Moon Leah But that dude just ran in there!
Moon Leah yes you would. The foam is designed to provide sufficent air molecules that you can breath it. Although it tastes terrible, you can actually survive being submered in High Expansion Foams. This is taken into consideration when engineering the product.
Tell that to the guy who died at Eglin AFB back in 2012...the bells go off at the before the foam starts to give you time to evacuate. Definitely not designed to allow you to breathe in it.
Same
nobody:
not even a single soul:
youtube:hey lets recommend this to the others
What an awesome invention, looks like it would be pretty effective.
Yeah, that's a real fire extinguisher! Impressing demonstration!
I don`t know why I geht this recomdended after 8 years. But it was interresting.
This is strangely satisfying
it's missing the house music
MsTokies a
Legend says the turbines are still producing foam
I like how it almost took a full minute before actually doing anything substantial. Couple that with ~30 seconds to notice a fire, react, and get to an alarm, and you've got a huge fireball that will likely engulf other planes
Thats the "PEOPLE, WE'RE ABOUT TO BLOW A LOAD ALL UP IN THIS BITCH' alarm. You dont want to activate the foam system with people still under it. This is to suppress a hanger fire until the on site fire brigade shows up, not to save a single plane. Assume any thing recoverable from said hanger was a chance of luck.
70 people burnt down their hangars.
make it 99
Make it 106
slitor 119
721 hangar fires
now 730
12 years later, always fun to watch.
Wow, youtube matched a song on this video. Apparently screaming alarms with bells on top is a new beat.
Wow
My school has 3 beat
It is EST Intergitys and Wheelock EHS AND SIMPLEX 4100es and and Notifier pulls and EST Sigas and EST 877 Panel.
Same
2:07 - at first I was like "oh poor guy can't afford a real phone". Then I was lik "Oh...2011".
2011 you are still right...
Saarland 2 China does it really matter
This comment really pisses me off
There was touch screen phones in 2011 but flip phones were still common
The whole hangar looks like a snowy wonderland
When your boss left u in charge
Need two of these for my back yard. Can you imagine being my neighbor and seeing this waterfall over the fence into your yard? XD
thats not snow thats bubbles
I would hate to be the one who has to clean up that mess.
The
better than clearing out a burnt hanger
Cambodia Paul's Organic Farming
Cambodia Paul's Organic Farming
Fishcraft123 4 fans won't clean it up. they just have to wait until it breaks down and drain away.
I work at a fuel farm storage facility for jet fuel and this is the system we have cool to see how it actually looks
Any thing I need is to discuss with my dad
By the time they finally star discharging that fire done spread
"too efficient but too expensive"
Do you have any idea of how much an aircraft would cost? Imagine a bunch of them
I like the fact that they still install mechanical bells in Canada instead of those awful piezo shriekers they use in the US.
Fun fact: you probably didn’t search for this but you are happy you found it :)
Its good to see you again Old Friend❤ Thanks Algorithm
Aunt Alga Rhythms favorite links.
thats what my room looks like on a lonely friday night
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
Yep, there it is. The first masturbation joke in the comments. Congratulations, you picked the low hanging fruit successfully.
This should've been top comment.
How is this not the number 1 comment?
go play roblox it will give u friends xD
idk why this was recommended to me 9 years later
Idk if this is any different than the foam fire suppressant in our hangars on base but this is usually highly toxic and is dangerous to be stuck in. Like it poisons the water supply if seeped into the ground and is an all around nightmare if its triggered.
If this is anything like AFFF (aqueous film forming foam), it is highly toxic and carcinogenic for absorption and inhalation. Not to mention it is extremely toxic to the environment and is a hazmat emergency as well.
Imagine these foam cannons at a nightclub and you're high on MDMA. You could play that alarm as a song, and nobody would be sober enough to notice. They might even enjoy it. 😃
10 years ago.. I bet that foam was full of PFAS.. nice... willing exposure.
Everyone: " YO THAT LOOKS SICK"
Janitor: "......"
just give it some time to evaporate you'll be fine
1:30 must have been an awesome experience (in the suit!). IT'S LIKE A GIANT BUBBLE BATH, only not a bath and not bubbles... and not meant to be swam in in the first place.
We just did an AV install in a new hangar facility about 3 times this size and our guys just missed getting to see the foam test in person.
I am NOT cleaning that up........... xD
Anthony Odin you dont, actually, would you rather: Live in that foam OR make a job for people to Clean up the foam
Its Just bubbles.
JRtheCREEPER300 The Gamer it’s foam water
Vaccum
Anthony Ferri you don’t have to you would just have a wet floor
Oh.... so basically a device that recreates my room after spending Valentines day alone.
So last night
@@huntersmith4115 Yep....
ewwwww
Little bit slow response at first, I assume the sprinkler lines were dry lines before activation - then wholly shit - lots of foam!! Great job.....now who's gonna clean up that mess and how?
This is so cool! How often are tests conducted? And do you just let the foam dissolve away?
I saw another video of this getting cleaned up. Its a mix of lettign the foam die down on its own and spraying it down with water. Then they have a bunch of guys with squeegee brooms push all the liquid out the hangar door to the trench drains
@@JKSSubstandard So that's how PFAS ends up contaminating wells and resivours near the airports. Gotta love those forever chemicals.
@@whitetacoma04 Right on dude! I did a PFOS mitigation status tour of Andrews AFB in October and the revisionist fire suppression systems they're using to eliminate use of fire suppression chems with PFOS.
@@whitetacoma04 Where I work we have big warehouses that store chemicals, we have a fire system like this and powerful water jets in some buildings. The whole thing is built so if it goes off, all the water or foam or liquid etc can be moved into huge ‘ponds’ on site so it can be collected and taken away and disposed off safely. As opposed to just dumping it into the river of drains. Best way to do it I think.
Actual footage of me at the end of No Nut November.
Microscopic version of Shane Dawson's cat*
@@fireboltofdeath hehe
Graham Hettinger can I get your ig lmao
Bruh
1st alarm means fire, 2nd one is an evacuation alarm thwt goes off before the suppression system
it would be more effective, if the large bubble blowers could move from one side of the building to the other