The of Reading Smoke: Dave Dodson
The of Reading Smoke: Dave Dodson
The of Reading Smoke: Dave Dodson
Developed By:
Dave Dodson
Former Battalion Chief & Duty Safety Officer
Lead Instructor – Response Solutions, LLC
The Art of Reading Smoke
As a Fire OFFICER – or Firefighter - you MUST be able to predict fire behavior and
hostile fire events. If you don’t or can’t, firefighters will die or be critically injured.
The key to predicting fire behavior is directly related to your ability to READ
SMOKE as you arrive and begin firefighting operations.
This class will help you discover the ART of READING SMOKE!
Reading smoke helps you discover the specific location and intensity of a fire, building
collapse potential, and the likelihood of a hostile fire event like flashover. If you can
discover these things – you can make better strategic and tactical decisions! In order to
read smoke, you must have a foundation in some basics:
1. Smoke Solids
70% of smoke is particulate (mostly carbon)
Carbon (soot) is black
Ash is dirty white (trace minerals and metals that carry heat)
Particulates can cause a fire in a compartment to become vent-restricted
2. Smoke Aerosols
Water – clean/uniform white when visible
Hydrocarbons – black droplets/mist
Oil/tar droplets can have self-ignition temperatures as low as 460°F
3. Smoke Gases
Thousands of gas types in smoke – most have no color
Most are transient and trace
Typical gases that impact fire behavior are Carbon Monoxide, Hydrogen Cyanide,
Benzene, and Acrolein
See chart (next page) for properties
“Ladder fuels”
Gases also create “continuity of fuel” throughout box
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Properties of Gases Typically Found in Smoke
Source: http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/npg/npg.html
Flash Point: The lowest temperature a fuel will off-gas an ignitable mixture that will simply
flash – but not SUSTAIN, given a spark or flame.
Fire Point: The lowest temperature a fuel will off-gas an ignitable mixture that will ignite and
continue to burn given a spark or flame.
Ignition Temperature: The lowest temperature a fuel will off-gas an ignitable mixture that can
self-ignite.
Burnable gases must be in their right percentage with air to ignite. In hostile fires, a gas may
be hot enough to self-ignite – but is too rich to burn. Firefighters’ efforts can cause this
ignition.
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Second, the “new” compartment fire can transition through SIX PHASES!
Turbulent = flashover
Laminar = box is still absorbing
REMEMBER the “human life” thresholds: 195F for the airway and 300F for Skin (1
minute exposure).
The Process:
4. Look at windows!
Windows clear = <160°F
Windows wet = 160-190°F nearby
Windows black-stained and heat cracked = Reduced life survivability
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5. Turbulent vs. Laminar is perhaps the first and most important smoke
observation
Volume = Amount of fuel off-gassing, helps you understand relativity to the box, sets an
impression for everything else. A small volume of smoke from more than one opening of a
LARGE building is significant.
Velocity (Speed and flow characteristic) = Pressure build-up. Only volume and heat
can cause pressure. Volume-caused pressure will immediately slow down. Heat-caused
pressure slows gradually. Turbulent smoke is heat-caused. Comparing velocities help you
figure WHERE the actual fire is. Look for the fastest smoke from the most-resistive opening.
Density = Quality of Burning, potential for event - PERHAPS THE MOST IMPORTANT
FACTOR FOR PREDICTING SEVERITY – the thicker the smoke, the more dangerous it is.
Zero-visibility smoke has fuel continuity to the fire and can ignite with no warning to those
within it. Zero-visibility smoke with high velocity is amazingly dangerous!
Color = Stage of heating and distance to fire. As a starting place, White is cooler, black is
hotter. Carbon and hydrocarbons are STICKY and can be FILTERED – taking away
blackness as smoke travels over distance or through cracks. White smoke should not be
discarded! DIRTY WHITE smoke with velocity means a hot fire – but the smoke you see has
traveled some distance. Thin, black smoke means “Flame Pushed.” Brown Smoke means
unfinished wood is pyrolyizing.
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STEP 2: WHAT is INFLUENCING THE KEY ATTRIBUTES?
Container – can change the meaning of volume, velocity, density, and color
Weather – hot/humid gives a narrow, defined column; hot/dry gives a cone shaped column;
cold/humid causes the smoke to crash and hangout near; cold/dry causes the smoke to crash
but disperse easily. Below freezing air temperatures can make black smoke look white within
a few feet of the outside vent opening (moisture content of smoke condensing).
Firefighting Efforts – all four attributes should change: Volume increases; velocity surges
then slows down; density immediately decreases; color goes to clean/pristine white. If this
isn’t happening, the fire attack is inadequate. PPV fans can alter all the smoke attributes.
Dirty white smoke Heat-pushed smoke that has traveled a distance or has had
with velocity the carbon/hydrocarbon filtered (like smoke through a crack)
Same color Deep-seated fire, possibly located well within a building or in
(white/gray) and combustible voids and concealed spaces
same velocity from
multiple openings
Low volume white Serious fire deep within
smoke from more
than one location of
a large box
Brown smoke Unfinished wood pyrolyizing (can support flame); usually a
sign that a contents fire is transitioning into a structural fire;
when coming from structural spaces of lightweight wood
structures, a warning sign of collapse!
Yellowish-gray Sulfur compounds = Warning sign of impending backdraft
smoke from cracks
or seams
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GROUP ACTIVITY: What Does the Smoke Say?
What’s Next? (where is the fire going and how fast - be specific)
Remember:
Call me if you want more info: Dave Dodson (303) 912-1201, [email protected]
Dave Dodson’s 3 volume “Reading Smoke” DVD training set is available for purchase
through www.pennwellbooks.com.
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