CPA Mags 2016 1601 | Page 41

(NOTE: Remember the couple in the Bonanza? Well, once when I was trying to pretty up my airplane I once attempted to burn test some carpeting because of that story. I made a frame, tried to meet the humidity and temperature criteria, and when I set a Bunsen burner flame to the carpet it went up like flash paper! Noxious, dripping gobs of plastic… on FIRE! They were dripping onto the floor! And I had been testing carpet that I had seen other guys use to cover their glareshields! Back to the drawing board!) The aftermarket plastics guys are frustrated because they buy materials that have been preapproved, but still have to have their parts tested after having only reformed the plastic sheet into a part. This adds considerable expense to the individual part. Once all of the means of avoiding or suppressing fires have been met, there is still the possibility of a fire and this can only be dealt with by having an extinguisher. Fires are categorized as A, B and C, and any extinguisher needs to be able to put out all three categories. The best media for doing this is Halon, but Halon has been banned by the EPA and is no longer manufactured. This logic escapes me. I would worry more about an immediate death or two than saving a couple of lives but leaving a hundred cubic feet of gas dispersing in the atmosphere, but I am JMC, not EPA. Fire extinguisher companies are working on other less harmful but equally effective gasses, but in the meantime still sell out of old inventory and have simply kept increasing the price of the extinguishers. What used to cost $19.95 is now well over a hundred bucks. It creates a” bend over but save lives” scenario. Pilots can buy Halon extinguishers in a number of places, but they should only install them in very limited places. An extinguisher should be mounted within easy reach of the pilot AND the copilot, and a smart guy would have one handy for the back seat passengers as well. These are not heavy or bulky, simply because the amount of space in a cockpit is relatively small. Halon can comprise up to 77 percent of the volume and not be harmfu