Labmanager Logo

Provide Fire Extinguishers, Safety Showers, and Eye Wash Fountains

Fire extinguishers need to be appropriate to the type of fire.

| 1 min read
Share this Article
Register for free to listen to this article
Listen with Speechify
0:00
1:00

Type A fires form an ash. A water extinguisher is for fires involving burning wood or paper. Type B fires consist of coiling liquids like oil and grease. Carbon dioxide is an extinguisher for B type fires. Type C fires carry an electric charge. Halon extinguishers and dry chemical powders are to be used here. Active metal fires are type D. Sand and special powders can be used on these fires.

The extinguishers should be mounted at the correct height and designated with a sign above to indicate the location.

Lab manager academy logo

Get training in Life Safety and earn CEUs.

One of over 25 IACET-accredited courses in the Academy.

Certification logo

Life Safety course

The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) Z-358.1-2004 standard provides design and performance recommendations for safety showers and eye wash fountains. It recommends weekly activation and annual testing.

Safety showers should provide water at a rate of 20 gallons per minute for at least 15 minutes. The valve should be a single-action level which stays on until it is pushed off.

Eye wash fountains should have a similar type actuating lever. The flow rate should be 1.5 gallons per minute for eye wash only and 4.0 gallons per minute for eye wash/ face wash combination devices.

The OSHA Lab Standard requires that employers indicate in the written chemical hygiene plan how these devices will be maintained and who is going to be responsible for checking and testing them. Monthly inspections are appropriate.

Source: Kaufman, James A., Laboratory Safety Guidelines - Expanded Edition, The Laboratory Safety Institute, www.labsafetyinstitute.org.

Interested in Lab Health & Safety News?

Subscribe to our free Lab Health & Safety newsletter.

Is the form not loading? If you use an ad blocker or browser privacy features, try turning them off and refresh the page.

Loading Next Article...
Loading Next Article...

CURRENT ISSUE - November 2024

The Blueprint for Lab Safety Success

Protecting your lab's greatest asset: its people

Lab Manager November 2024 Cover Image
Lab Manager Lab Health & Safety eNewsletter

Stay Connected with Lab Health & Safety News

Click below to subscribe to Lab Health & Safety eNewsletter!

Subscribe Today