How do FIRE SPRINKLERS Work? (slomo)

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  • Опубликовано: 21 авг 2024
  • This shows how fire sprinklers work and just how sensitive and fast they operate when heated up.
    -
    This head was dropped so it was decided it should not be installed. Thank you Darren for donating this.
    - NOTE- This video is copyrighted and for some reason a ton of people have stolen it and reuploaded it. I protect my work like a mother bear, and will file a copyright violation report with RUclips every time I see it. (which is automatically detected and reported to me) Just don't do it.
    Ok?
    Cameras: Casio EXF1 Pro (1200 and 600 FPS)

Комментарии • 416

  • @jimyeats
    @jimyeats Год назад +3

    I love the fact that despite watching Jeff and the Taofledermaus crew for years and years now I can still stumble upon a great video like this that I never knew existed that is super interesting.

  • @TroyaE117
    @TroyaE117 9 лет назад +23

    Simple design. It has save so many lives.

  • @ewyot
    @ewyot 12 лет назад +1

    that is F***ing clever engineering but so simple you would never think they would be as intricate as that !

  • @chelsierdrinnonii5552
    @chelsierdrinnonii5552 4 года назад +1

    The 'Fluid' is glycerin based and expands when it reaches a certain temperature! Very cool video! Thanks for posting!

  • @CasioEXF1Freak
    @CasioEXF1Freak 12 лет назад +3

    I was also unfortunate enough to find out they will go off when accidentally hit just right with a pipe...I had one hell of a mess to clean up afterwards.

  • @Rivarokband
    @Rivarokband 9 лет назад +111

    Except in real life the water is black as oil for a few seconds! !

    • @taofledermaus
      @taofledermaus  9 лет назад +23

      Rivarokband and smells really bad too.

    • @HhappyBirthday
      @HhappyBirthday 9 лет назад +5

      Dear ***** , Why so?
      Why is the water, black as oil and also, smelly ?
      What causes each of those two factors, please.
      .
      Thanks.

    • @barnes99223
      @barnes99223 9 лет назад +29

      HhappyBirthday The pipe rust and oxideis as water is in it, So as a fire sprinkler guy like me, go out every couple years and flushes the pipes with fresh water and a lot of air behind it to flush all the rust and crap that is in it. why it stinks is for the fact water sits in there with the rust =stinky water

    • @barnes99223
      @barnes99223 9 лет назад +3

      ***** I work for Western states fire in washington you ?

    • @barnes99223
      @barnes99223 9 лет назад +2

      I used to like 3 years ago, now i work for my brother at One tree had cider

  • @LengthyProcess
    @LengthyProcess 5 лет назад +1

    The liquid in the tube is glycerine. It expands and shatters the glass at temperatures between 155 and 165 °F (68.333°C.) When the glass breaks it releases the copper plug, shooting water to the round piece on the end which spreads the water outward eliminating the fire.

  • @bwc1976
    @bwc1976 10 лет назад +77

    I remember in the college dorms, my resident assistant told us the water in the sprinklers was dirty and 20+ years old.

    • @TheAsakararen
      @TheAsakararen 8 лет назад +19

      in most pipes it is at my work place one of my idiot coworkers hit a sprinkler with a fork lift stunk the place out for a week

    • @Mike......................
      @Mike...................... 6 лет назад +11

      Yeah, often the water for the sprinklers is stored in tanks on the top of the building so they can even work without power. But often the sprinklers remain unused for several years, so the water also stays there for that long.

    • @lowquality4082
      @lowquality4082 6 лет назад +8

      Mike Vormann Yeah. Also at my school, we have two shower stalls but we never shower because well, we don’t need to in school. I was told it was probably sitting there for years. So one of these girls decided to turn it on and stick her hand in there and it smelled so bad.

    • @Mike......................
      @Mike...................... 6 лет назад +2

      - JustSimplyThinking - Yep, luckily we in Germany have other systems. Our Water system is directly connected to the boiler of the heater and there's a pump pumping the water from the basement to the different floors.

    • @Justadonkey
      @Justadonkey 6 лет назад +2

      Mike Vormann sounds like it requires electricity

  • @FuzzyDiceProjects
    @FuzzyDiceProjects 12 лет назад +6

    Great one! Very well demonstrated and beautiful high speed!

  • @serenitynaturalhealth9213
    @serenitynaturalhealth9213 11 лет назад +6

    The liquid used in glass bulb sprinklers is a non-toxic proprietary glycerin solution that that expands when heated.
    If you closely examine the older full size bulbs you will see that the bubble size varies with the operation temperature. It is not so easy to see on the modern 2.5 and 3mm bulbs.
    Also the 'glass' is normally a quartz type of glass to ensure complete disintegration of the bulb on operation.

  • @ryukenosuke
    @ryukenosuke 12 лет назад +3

    I knew it!!! My theory on how these work was spot on. Thanks for proving it with your video. Your 2 F1's are really proving useful. I may have to invest in a 2nd one like you.
    Also on my wish list is a FLIR E65 thermal imager, and if I ever decide to sell my stocks, possibly invest in a Phantom series high speed camera. I'm sure you've got a wish list for toys, as well.

  • @goldenduck7294
    @goldenduck7294 8 лет назад +80

    I am very high and expected sprinklers to shoot fire.

    • @AnotherGlenn
      @AnotherGlenn 8 лет назад +1

      Me too.

    • @onyxtay7246
      @onyxtay7246 7 лет назад +7

      I'm not high, but I was kind of hoping that some mad man turned a sprinkler meant to put out fires into a flamethrower.

    • @mattgosline4301
      @mattgosline4301 6 лет назад

      maybe if someone confused the black iron pipe that's used for natural gas with the black iron pipe that's used for sprinklers

    • @eirikhaarberg4392
      @eirikhaarberg4392 5 лет назад

      At the very least sprinkle a little fire...

  • @heathergustafson5468
    @heathergustafson5468 5 лет назад +2

    Really enjoying the music he plays when it's slow motion haha

  • @father6371
    @father6371 5 лет назад

    I work as a commercial fire sprinkler fitter. Never seen one pop off in slow motion. Pretty neat haha

  • @Calling321
    @Calling321 9 лет назад +2

    Very cool slow motion. You can see what happens with the retaining aparatus when it dislodges

  • @boobookitty7556
    @boobookitty7556 6 лет назад +4

    The slow mo music was so dramatic : )

  • @Rivarokband
    @Rivarokband 9 лет назад +1

    Worked for Chesapeake Sprinkler in D.C. back in the 80's as a service tech on dry systems (freezeups), restorations and base bldg/tenant work. Yea that iron bacteria smells like money! Only a sprinkler fitter knows that! Haha I've been in plumbing/pipe fitting trades ever since.

  • @kingoftaurus
    @kingoftaurus 10 лет назад +6

    The stuff inside is a mixture of glycerin and dyed with food coloring to indicate temperature at which it breaks.

  • @meuberepic
    @meuberepic 12 лет назад

    educational and entertaining. one of my top ten youtube channels for sure.

  • @resqjason2
    @resqjason2 11 лет назад

    the liquid is alcohol. there is a small bubble in the liquid that determines the temp that the head will activate. the small bubble allows for fluctuations in temp without activating. once the temp gets to the activation temp the fluid expands to a point that the bubble is absorbed and the fluid has nowhere else to expand and ruptures the glass ampule allowing the water to spray. larger bubble in the glass the higher temp of activation. the fluid is colored to indicate temp as well

  • @mosaic617
    @mosaic617 7 лет назад +23

    Shoulda used an upright head if u we're gunna have it in that position

    • @TheDawgButter
      @TheDawgButter 6 лет назад

      Ian Curran I was thinking the same thing.. it's kinda started to bother me when the slow Mo hit

    • @66neoncowboy
      @66neoncowboy 5 лет назад

      Right, it´s a 1/2" Viking pendent sprinkler with quick response

    • @rightorwrong9412
      @rightorwrong9412 5 лет назад +5

      Jürgen Bauer it clearly says TYCO right on it. Not a Viking head.

  • @avinashkanesen53
    @avinashkanesen53 5 лет назад

    The sprinkler contains quartzoid bulb.The red colour indicates the operating temperature of the bulb.It partially filled with gas and special fluid.When heat is applied ,this fluid increases in pressure causing the gas inside expands and burst the bulb.

  • @smartereveryday
    @smartereveryday 12 лет назад +6

    Did it get you in the face?

  • @DanielDaniel1
    @DanielDaniel1 11 лет назад +1

    Didn't realize the amount of water those things out out!

  • @PromisKeeper
    @PromisKeeper 7 лет назад

    In response to the top comment... There was a device I had seen several years ago that I am now unable to find. No joke, but I think it was called "Dam it". You would get soaked trying to use it, but the plug was on some sort of extension rod and you would wedge the plug in between the diffuser and the orifice. If it meant saving valuables from water damage because of the accidental discharge of a head, getting soaked would be the price you pay instead of waiting on the FD.

  • @NemorisInferioris
    @NemorisInferioris 6 лет назад

    Crazy how that little piece of glass holes back all that water pressure.

  • @ViperJay5
    @ViperJay5 8 лет назад +4

    Thanks for showing this! I had no idea that was how the sprinkler was activated.

  • @qatpatience2K
    @qatpatience2K 2 года назад +1

    So the only thing holding the plug is that tiny vial? Wow! 😳

  • @crooked-halo
    @crooked-halo 6 лет назад

    So that's why those sprinkler heads often have protective cages around them. If something or someone breaks the tube by hitting it, it goes off.

  • @kattemissen
    @kattemissen 12 лет назад

    you can see that it bursts before the "second" flame hits it, i imagine it is because the first flame had heated the metal which then takes a little while to distribute heat into the glass/liquid.

  • @daewooparts
    @daewooparts 12 лет назад

    thanks ! i did manage to salvage quite a few new units from that van ,but they never got hot where they were stored ,we used 16 of them in my friends bodyshop when he put in the oven booth and in the paint mixing room ,there was lots of good stuff in it and the company just left it all behind,guess they won't use it for liability purposes and the insurance paid them for everything

  • @andrewsoros360
    @andrewsoros360 11 лет назад

    its called a quartzoid bulb.. all it needs is a weee bit of expansion for it to break, depending on the color.

  • @penmanpenmann5905
    @penmanpenmann5905 8 лет назад +3

    Very good demo. Thanks - Penmann

    • @justjustjoo
      @justjustjoo 8 лет назад +1

      +penman penmann Is your real name penman penmann?

  • @daewooparts
    @daewooparts 12 лет назад

    remember finding a van full of them back in PA ,it was ironic that the van was burned and it belonged to a fire maintence company,it had the huge FIRE on the side,several cases of them were good that were in sealed boxes and in draws ,but there was hundreds of pounds of dead ones that i SCRAPPED FOR BRASS, they got mixed up with lots of spent cartridges on my brass &copper run to the scrappers

  • @dusterdude238
    @dusterdude238 11 лет назад

    I read somewhere once that the color of the Ampule indicates what temp. they will burst at.
    Red: 155 Deg. F.
    Orange: 175 Deg. F.
    Green: 200 Deg. F.
    Blue: 286 Deg. F.
    Violet 360 Deg. F.
    Of course this book was written in 1983, so things might have changed since then,
    the ampuls in this vid look much thinner in the ones Pictured in the book

  • @Ic3crawler
    @Ic3crawler 12 лет назад

    Great idea, impressive to see in slo-mo. As always, good job!

  • @HDXFH
    @HDXFH 11 лет назад +2

    Interesting, always wondered how these work!

  • @ChrisreadIRL
    @ChrisreadIRL 12 лет назад

    great video! its so cool to see things like this in slow motion.

  • @ReverendTed
    @ReverendTed 8 лет назад +31

    I'm curious - if you were to accidentally set one of these off, is it possible to plug it with your finger until someone's able to get it turned off so that the room doesn't flood?

    • @Xissorplane
      @Xissorplane 8 лет назад +6

      I think the pressure is to high. At university we have these wedges on a stick, with a rubbery material, which can be jammed inside to stop most of the flow, but I think you need to force it quite hard.

    • @taofledermaus
      @taofledermaus  8 лет назад +16

      I doubt it

    • @ReverendTed
      @ReverendTed 8 лет назад +1

      *****
      I ask because it SEEMS like the glass ampule can only be resisting so much force, but I can see that it might be one of those situations where an object is stronger than one might expect.

    • @Xissorplane
      @Xissorplane 8 лет назад +2

      +ReverendTed I think the glass is holding the copper/brass "plug", but I don't think the plug holds back the water itself, but is holding back a spring loaded valve inside.
      This is pure conjecture, though. Couldn't find anything about the mechanism in a quick googlesearch.

    • @ReverendTed
      @ReverendTed 8 лет назад +4

      Xissorplane
      I Google'd "fire sprinkler mechanism" myself and it looks like the plug itself does indeed hold back the water. This video is already the first result.

  • @CarlHubscher
    @CarlHubscher 5 лет назад

    Retrofitting Sprinklers is difficult or costly. Think out of box or this case out of house. Aesthetic pvc conduit maybe appearing like trim or downspout on exterior walls connected to wall mounted sprinklers. Water released into exterior pipe once smoke or heat detector triggers.

  • @eltattooma
    @eltattooma 5 лет назад +1

    Thank you.
    I learned something new today.

  • @WaznGuy
    @WaznGuy 12 лет назад

    Very cool, btw the red liquid is a glycerin based liquid

  • @NoobPwnr000
    @NoobPwnr000 11 лет назад

    I'm all emotional from the music now

  • @tonythephatone
    @tonythephatone 12 лет назад

    ... this is something i've never thought to wonder about... neat video! i'm gonna have to tell the guys at ultraslow to do it as well.. see if their higher-speed cameras pick up even more.

  • @benheatherman2839
    @benheatherman2839 8 лет назад +31

    IN GENUINE POTATO DEFINITION!

    • @taofledermaus
      @taofledermaus  8 лет назад +11

      +Ben Heatherman at least I have a potato

    • @benheatherman2839
      @benheatherman2839 8 лет назад +1

      +TAOFLEDERMAUS Indeed. The red fluid in the capsule must have been under quite a bit of pressure to spew back out of that cup on the pip.

  • @NaplesSwampRat
    @NaplesSwampRat 12 лет назад

    lol, my grandfather was a firefighter so he put them in his house. he hasnt had house insurance for over 30 years either

  • @preciousjhu8834
    @preciousjhu8834 3 года назад

    Very good demonstarion its realy clear to undertand.

  • @PsychoticBovine
    @PsychoticBovine 12 лет назад

    Oh, and the liquid inside is a glycerin of some type. The website I checked said it was proprietary to their company.

  • @RonJohn63
    @RonJohn63 8 лет назад

    Clever idea. Nowadays the first thought would be a thermocouple connected to a microcontroller... :(

  • @aacconcrete3550
    @aacconcrete3550 8 лет назад

    When a ceiling reach 155 F, the house occupants are already wake up by the smoke alarm and outside.

    • @moparedtn
      @moparedtn 7 лет назад +2

      I wish that were the case but in many instances, fire occurs quicker than folks have time to wake up from the alarm and get outside.
      Sprinklers save lives every day.

  • @stxrobstar
    @stxrobstar 12 лет назад

    Reading the title of your vid I thought for sure that you were gonna rig up a fire breathing gasoline sprinkler.
    ;*)

  • @astifcaulkinyeras
    @astifcaulkinyeras 12 лет назад +1

    Cool! I've always wondered how those things work.

  • @leexgx
    @leexgx 11 лет назад

    en.wikipedia org/wiki/Fire_sprinkler shows you you color that the temps they break at, the red ones seems standard in most buildings unless you're in the kitchen then the Blue or Purple i would assume would be used to prevent them from going off when sudden heat hits them (opening an oven door can let a lot of heat out) as an fire is hotter than 200c any way so they set off and hose the place with water (i guess they work out where the higher rated ones need to be when been installed)

  • @daewooparts
    @daewooparts 12 лет назад

    it was back in korea,but didn't care much , i just turned off the water feed to that line of sprinklers,it was fixed just a few hours later,not much damage except sprinkler head and 8 feet of copper piping,i scrapped that to back in korea

  • @brianweber8228
    @brianweber8228 11 лет назад

    The liquid is glycerin based to keep from freezing and expands under heat. The darker spot that you see is NOT mercury, it is an air bubble.

  • @mikkelchandler5503
    @mikkelchandler5503 2 года назад

    That's Glycerin bulbs that heat up and burst when it reaches 155 and also it triggers fire alarm and sprinkler.

    • @rawbacon
      @rawbacon 2 года назад

      How does it trigger the fire alarm? Do mean a separate fire alarm unit that works the same way?

  • @thepurdychannel8866
    @thepurdychannel8866 6 лет назад

    You can get red green yellow and black glass beads for them and they go off at different temperatures

  • @huyked
    @huyked 12 лет назад

    It's interesting, and quite unexpected (though I don't know how it works), that the copper thing with up, then down, then up again. I thought it would just blow out on one go.

  • @keithhasafastcar
    @keithhasafastcar 10 лет назад +1

    for some reason i read the title and thought a sprinkler that throws fire

  • @joshryan9735
    @joshryan9735 2 года назад +1

    Today guys where using a unique kinda shell today a nice 12 gauge round with a sprinkler head built in....

  • @killerta87
    @killerta87 6 лет назад

    I miss these videos jeff, wish could do more

  • @rightleg5920
    @rightleg5920 6 лет назад

    Gotta love the classics

  • @DeenSteen
    @DeenSteen 12 лет назад

    They are covered by that metal thing, so that is probably rare.

  • @perspectivefilm
    @perspectivefilm 8 лет назад +4

    that glass tube is awesome. how many psi can it handle? (correct me if im wrong with the unit psi of water inside the pipe)

    • @terryyouth
      @terryyouth 8 лет назад +1

      have you tried holding an raw egg vertical in between the palm of your hands and try to smash it? . Try it and tell me how it went

    • @perspectivefilm
      @perspectivefilm 8 лет назад +2

      that glass tube is awesome. how many psi can it handle? (correct me if im wrong with the unit psi of water inside the pipe)

    • @moparedtn
      @moparedtn 7 лет назад +4

      Sprinkler heads have to withstand a 200psi test before final approval of the installation; they have a maximum "rated" working pressure of 175psi.

  • @rawbacon
    @rawbacon 2 года назад +1

    I've put in quite a few but never bothered to set one off.

  • @PsychoticBovine
    @PsychoticBovine 12 лет назад

    thankfully! I was going to fly my electric r/c helicopter at work, but was paranoid about hitting a sprinkler head. That would be most embarrassing!

  • @shenanickans
    @shenanickans 12 лет назад

    I have always wondered this.
    Thanks for the cool footage! :)

  • @nasanasa3
    @nasanasa3 11 лет назад

    It's probably the same fluid they put in those cheapie thermometers, especially since the sprinkler sounds just like one when it bursts. (Don't ask how I know.)

  • @TADPOLE696
    @TADPOLE696 12 лет назад

    the color of the bulb indicates the temp rating

  • @gurderman
    @gurderman 11 лет назад

    that is pretty cool and i like the music

  • @MrSmithdogg98
    @MrSmithdogg98 12 лет назад

    Always wondered how they work, cool video too

  • @Stickymajorwow
    @Stickymajorwow 11 лет назад

    the fluid in the little glass thing is mercury

  • @satelng
    @satelng 11 лет назад

    well, it did put the lighter out so I would say...well done

  • @PsychoticBovine
    @PsychoticBovine 12 лет назад

    I have always been curious about that! That was quick, I am really surprised how quick that thing popped. I wonder if anyone in an office has accidentally set one off by hitting one with something?

  • @soulchain247
    @soulchain247 12 лет назад

    i wactched this video when it was 43 seconds old

  • @---rw8xs
    @---rw8xs 5 лет назад

    I believe is kerosene dye with red, same as thermometer,because I burn thermometers many times.

  • @1acroyear1
    @1acroyear1 9 лет назад

    Either this dude has Parkinson's or he drinks *way* too much coffee.

  • @BeezyKing99
    @BeezyKing99 11 лет назад

    thats thermometer fluid inside a glass vial (thin glass that'll break on expansion of the fluid)

  • @deboshadow
    @deboshadow 6 лет назад

    Might get away with a revisit using the high speed camera

  • @imacanoli897
    @imacanoli897 12 лет назад

    @trefod
    He could just be jittery from caffeine, hunger, or anxiety from the sprinkler head.

  • @benner2000
    @benner2000 12 лет назад

    @taofledermaus I most noticed that the vial changed from a translucent red to a very solid dark red before it blew.

  • @Sreejith.93
    @Sreejith.93 6 лет назад +2

    I have been looking for this video.
    Thanks. Bro u r awesome

  • @advancedfunposting8881
    @advancedfunposting8881 7 лет назад

    oh man you should do this again with the chronos

  • @daewooparts
    @daewooparts 12 лет назад

    the ones in my friends paint booth have even a higher breaking point temp,

  • @Patrio7
    @Patrio7 12 лет назад

    uncanny, i was taking to a friend the other day about how they work, i've heard of one warehouse where someone accidently clipped one of these with the top of a forklift, they had to get the fire brigade to shut off the pumps / kill the alarms.

  • @danielanderson2030
    @danielanderson2030 8 лет назад

    whenever we change heads we always keep the old ones to scrap. one day we got bored and made some water bombs with these tied into a 12 inch nipped of 1" filled mostly with water and then pressurize them to like 40 pounds and break the link or bulb in a guys truck.

  • @215alessio
    @215alessio 12 лет назад

    those things react fast wow

  • @NaplesSwampRat
    @NaplesSwampRat 12 лет назад

    wonder is the old ones are the same. my grandfather has them in his house lol . prob been there for over 30 years

  • @Stickymajorwow
    @Stickymajorwow 11 лет назад

    always thought it was mercury thanks dude now i know

  • @caspianbell9556
    @caspianbell9556 7 лет назад

    I thought it was gonna be a lawn sprinkler with gasoline coming out of it but you should make that one anyway

  • @shenanickans
    @shenanickans 12 лет назад

    I don't think it has been done, at least not released to the public at the most.
    Oh, btw, I got a couple slow-motion clips I'm thinking about putting up. :D

  • @Stickymajorwow
    @Stickymajorwow 11 лет назад

    i didn't think of that i was always told it was mercury but its a type of alcohol

  • @fjdbendfllf9119
    @fjdbendfllf9119 7 лет назад

    awe man, I thought you were going to make a flamethrower sprinkler :/

  • @singjaikarting
    @singjaikarting 7 лет назад +1

    thx for your demonstration

  • @pushkarmehra2002
    @pushkarmehra2002 6 лет назад +1

    Very nice

  • @ganeshhegde4122
    @ganeshhegde4122 10 лет назад

    its really good video... demo is simple & nice.

  • @KHRN2014
    @KHRN2014 3 года назад

    Very good! Thank you!!

  • @Fromard
    @Fromard 5 лет назад

    Reminds me of my wife after a few drinks.

  • @fordxbgtfalcon
    @fordxbgtfalcon 12 лет назад

    I can vouch for people hitting them with stuff, im an engineer at a shopping mall and its happened about 20 times in the past 13 years here.

  • @mattgosline4301
    @mattgosline4301 6 лет назад

    Would be cool if you could side by side a quick response (slim bulb) versus a standard response (fat bulb) head