Soooooo many things wrong here... Halotron is NOT Halon 1211. Halotron is HCFC-123. Halon 1211 is BCF. Plus - you have Ansul CleanGuard up there, which is neither Halon nor Halotron. CleanGuard is FE-36 - a completely different clean agent.
Halotron is not Halon 1211 and Halotron is. Not a gas, its actually a liquid and boils around 80f which makes it easier to control and aim. Now that said, halon is more efficient and requires less material to fight the same size fire compared to Halotron II recently replaced at my shop the old Halon 1211 units with Halotron I units and one larger CO2 unit as well. In addition i also have the 4A 60BC units for areas that do not require a clean agent. Different tools for different uses. Also have an AED and aid kit as well, plus a couple of 10 minute Escape SCBA units. Plus i got certified for first aid/aed/cpr. Lol safest shop in the world, above osha and state/city requirements 100x fold. Its impossible to find good employees, much cheaper to make sure they are safe and secure.
Halotron I and Halon 1211 are different agents. Halon 1211 is no longer manufactured, Halotron I will be legal until 2030, when it will be replaced by even more environmentally friendly agents such as FE-36.
CO2 extinguishers need to be hydrostatically tested every five years. Halotron extinguishers need internal maintenance every six years and hydrostatic testing every 12 years. What I think you mean by shelf life is whether the agent will "go bad" and in both cases it won't go bad over time.
Soooooo many things wrong here... Halotron is NOT Halon 1211. Halotron is HCFC-123. Halon 1211 is BCF. Plus - you have Ansul CleanGuard up there, which is neither Halon nor Halotron. CleanGuard is FE-36 - a completely different clean agent.
Halotron is not Halon 1211 and Halotron is. Not a gas, its actually a liquid and boils around 80f which makes it easier to control and aim.
Now that said, halon is more efficient and requires less material to fight the same size fire compared to Halotron II recently replaced at my shop the old Halon 1211 units with Halotron I units and one larger CO2 unit as well. In addition i also have the 4A 60BC units for areas that do not require a clean agent. Different tools for different uses.
Also have an AED and aid kit as well, plus a couple of 10 minute Escape SCBA units. Plus i got certified for first aid/aed/cpr.
Lol safest shop in the world, above osha and state/city requirements 100x fold. Its impossible to find good employees, much cheaper to make sure they are safe and secure.
gee, we are all so thrilled that you are on here pontificating.
@@homerburns7387 And how wonderful it is to see you here whining about it.
Halotron I and Halon 1211 are different agents. Halon 1211 is no longer manufactured, Halotron I will be legal until 2030, when it will be replaced by even more environmentally friendly agents such as FE-36.
FE-36 is actually less environmentally friendly than Halotron.
Which is better to have in a car?
You can blow them into a running engine too.
What is the shelf life and how often do you need to switch them out.
CO2 extinguishers need to be hydrostatically tested every five years. Halotron extinguishers need internal maintenance every six years and hydrostatic testing every 12 years. What I think you mean by shelf life is whether the agent will "go bad" and in both cases it won't go bad over time.
how old is this
12 year hydrostatic test on clean agent extinguisher
Very misleading info Halotron IS NOT Halton 1211.....I recommend to disregard any info contained in this video