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View Full Version : If a fire started, What do you do?


pawpawdiv9
01-19-2014, 12:13 PM
Ok guys Whats important?
If a fire started, What would you do?

1. Get out and run (and family& dog)
2. Grab the wallet
3. Grab any sports collectibles around
4. Grab the safe (if able to carry)
5. grab any electronics (laptops cell phones, ipads)
6. grab a garden hoses and buckets
7. Tell the fireman to hurry up, i got collectibles in there

Jim65
01-19-2014, 12:15 PM
1 & 2

Griffins
01-19-2014, 12:17 PM
We get a lot of fires in SoCal, and when the news crews come in the first thing most people lament losing is their photos and videos.
Save people and pets first, photos 2nd, the rest is just stuff.

gregr2
01-19-2014, 12:25 PM
Family is more important than anything else.

ibuysportsephemera
01-19-2014, 12:28 PM
I know that this was supposed to be a tongue in cheek post...but as a volunteer firefighter I can offer some serious advice. If you do have a fire... and you can close the door the fire room...do it. A closed door to the fire room can stop the rapid spread of a fire. If you do get stuck in a fire, it probably will be the smoke that will do the most damage to you or kill you. There usually is a small layer of clean air close to the floor. If you can put your face into your shirt and crawl along the floor, you increase your odds of getting out. When you get out, do not under any circumstances go back into the fire building. You will probably not get out and the way we deal with a fire with people in the structure is very different than if the building is empty. Of course the most obvious is make sure that your smoke detectors and co detectors are working.

Jeff

ALR-bishop
01-19-2014, 12:34 PM
After starting a fire at Bob and Anthony's house, I would wait until they went out the front door and then go in the back door to try to save their collections. I would do the same for Larry, but do not know where he lives...which is probably just how Larry intends it

If at my house I would exit, wait 15 minutes and then call the FD, since I would like a smaller house at this stage of my life, and my heirs would not have to worry about how to get rid of my collection.

Since my wife's family lost their entire house in a Tornado in 74, we have always backed up pictures off premise

KCRfan1
01-19-2014, 04:35 PM
I know that this was supposed to be a tongue in cheek post...but as a volunteer firefighter I can offer some serious advice. If you do have a fire... and you can close the door the fire room...do it. A closed door to the fire room can stop the rapid spread of a fire. If you do get stuck in a fire, it probably will be the smoke that will do the most damage to you or kill you. There usually is a small layer of clean air close to the floor. If you can put your face into your shirt and crawl along the floor, you increase your odds of getting out. When you get out, do not under any circumstances go back into the fire building. You will probably not get out and the way we deal with a fire with people in the structure is very different than if the building is empty. Of course the most obvious is make sure that your smoke detectors and co detectors are working.

Jeff

Good advice Jeff. I hope none of us will ever have to put it to use.

vintagetoppsguy
01-19-2014, 06:12 PM
7. Tell the fireman to hurry up, i got a boatload of ammunition in there

#7, but I corrected it for you.

Cards are in a fire-proof safe. Not too worried about those.

Bestdj777
01-19-2014, 07:02 PM
I have two fire safes. One with cards, which are always replaceable, and one with the family heirlooms. I'm grabbing the second every time. Depending on how long I had, I might grab a couple watches from my collection as well.

ibuysportsephemera
01-19-2014, 07:04 PM
I have two fire safes. One with cards, which are always replaceable, and one with the family heirlooms. I'm grabbing the second every time. Depending on how long I had, I might grab a couple watches from my collection as well.

Hi Chris, I collect watches as well. I just picked up a new Omega Seamaster as a present for myself for my upcoming 50th.

Jeff

I Only Smoke 4 the Cards
01-19-2014, 07:42 PM
If you do have a fire... and you can close the door the fire room...do it. A closed door to the fire room can stop the rapid spread of a fire. If you do get stuck in a fire, it probably will be the smoke that will do the most damage to you or kill you. There usually is a small layer of clean air close to the floor. If you can put your face into your shirt and crawl along the floor, you increase your odds of getting out.

Thanks for the advice. I don't know if I would have thought to close the door in a panic.

Bestdj777
01-19-2014, 08:52 PM
Hi Chris, I collect watches as well. I just picked up a new Omega Seamaster as a present for myself for my upcoming 50th.

Jeff

Hi Jeff, very nice. Congrats on the pickup and happy birthday! I haven't gotten anything new in a while - 2010 was my last purchase - but have been keeping my eyes open for a nice vintage piece. I'm incredibly picky regarding the patina, so it has been a very long search. I love having a collection if pieces I can wear and enjoy.

the 'stache
01-20-2014, 05:28 AM
All you guys with cards in fireproof safes, how do you account for temperature? I'd be just as worried about the cards burning, or the slabs melting all over the cards. Are these media safes?

the 'stache
01-20-2014, 05:30 AM
Oh, and 1 & 3.

novakjr
01-20-2014, 06:52 AM
Honestly. I had a fire in early November. Got the kids and dog out to my car, called 911 and went in to quickly assess the situation. Once I realized that there was nothing I could do about the fire, I closed the door to that room(not because I thought it was what I was supposed to do, just a quick natural reaction) and got out.. Luckily the damage was limited to that room, plus some smoke damage to the entire upstairs, and a little water damage downstairs..

My collectibles honestly didn't cross my mind.. Possibly because they were the furthest away possible from the fire(smoke) in my house. And luckily, not under that room, the water from the firehose causes a bit of damage itself.. Maybe the fact that there was minimal odds of damage came into play, BUT also, it might've just been that ultimately, they're not that important in a life or death situation..

Bestdj777
01-20-2014, 11:34 AM
All you guys with cards in fireproof safes, how do you account for temperature? I'd be just as worried about the cards burning, or the slabs melting all over the cards. Are these media safes?

I live in an apartment with firewalls, so, unless a fire started in my apartment itself I would not be too concerned with the heat. The primary purpose was to avoid water damage if the sprinklers went off.

ibuysportsephemera
01-20-2014, 11:59 AM
Hi Jeff, very nice. Congrats on the pickup and happy birthday! I haven't gotten anything new in a while - 2010 was my last purchase - but have been keeping my eyes open for a nice vintage piece. I'm incredibly picky regarding the patina, so it has been a very long search. I love having a collection if pieces I can wear and enjoy.

Thanks Chris...I won't be adding anything for awhile now that I have the Omega. Good luck on your next "find".

Jeff

vintagetoppsguy
01-20-2014, 12:42 PM
I live in an apartment with firewalls...

Couldn't the fire spread through the attic though?

Zach Wheat
01-20-2014, 02:06 PM
All you guys with cards in fireproof safes, how do you account for temperature? I'd be just as worried about the cards burning, or the slabs melting all over the cards. Are these media safes?

I would be a 1 & 3 man myself. I've scanned all of my pictures and digitized family videos and have 3 off site back ups.

Bill, fire rated safes are typically rated for a certain temperature and time...ie can stand a 350 degree temp for 120 minutes or something similar. Prices typically vary accordingly along with size.

Z Wheat

Bestdj777
01-20-2014, 03:03 PM
Couldn't the fire spread through the attic though?

I am on the 24th of approximately 30 floors. There was a massive fire in an apartment here a few months back, but the ones above it were fine and below it only suffered from water damage from what I recall. I don't even think the ones next door had much in the way of damage either.

pawpawdiv9
01-20-2014, 03:04 PM
FYI guys..typical construction such as cement block is rated for 2 hrs and even stairwells are as well with usual core-board sheetrock and rock-wool insulation.
It can only stand so much, eventually the fire will get there....Its suppose to only give time to get out in a fire. Typical sheetrock wall, such in offices spaces are only 1 hr rated fire-walls and thats usually the corridors and maintance rooms.

I myself have 2 safes..one is a heavy but portable and the other is much larger, but weighs like 100 pds + for the bigger items ...and YES i do worry about them in a fire.

Volod
01-20-2014, 06:40 PM
Years ago, after a divorce, i moved into a small ground-floor condo, where i felt i only needed to worry about fire or theft. So, after some thought, i decided to store my collectibles in an old beat-up cardboard box on the floor in a bedroom closet where i could grab it fast and run in the event of a fire. Some months later, i awoke to the sound of trickling water around four AM, and found three inches worth had flooded the entire apartment from a blocked storm drain. In a panic, i saw that the bottom part of the storage box was already soaked. Fortunately, i had thought to line the inside of the box with several layers of heavy plastic, which saved the contents. But, i was seriously annoyed that the possibility of such a sneaky and fast-moving threat had not occurred to me.

Bestdj777
01-20-2014, 07:45 PM
I myself have 2 safes..one is a heavy but portable and the other is much larger, but weighs like 100 pds + for the bigger items ...and YES i do worry about them in a fire.

Don't worry Chris, your Exhibit Portrait and Post Panel are safe with me :)

Exhibitman
01-20-2014, 08:10 PM
1. Insure it to value and let it all burn...

2. Pitch all those cases of 1990s wax that you still have into the flames then see #1.

3. Pick up the check.

sycks22
01-20-2014, 08:19 PM
I'd go with family and old photo albums, everything else can be replaced.

tulsaboy
01-21-2014, 01:56 PM
After family and photos, I have a couple of heirlooms that I would pitch out the window. I also collect some vintage airplane photos and manuals that I know to be one of a kind. I would grab those as well.

Eric72
01-21-2014, 06:15 PM
Depending on the circumstances, I might grab a fire extinguisher. Since I love to cook, the most likely place for a fire to start in my home is the kitchen...or the deck, if I'm grilling on the barbecue.

Closest I ever came to torching the abode involved accidentally creating a new grilling recipe, "Pollo en Fuego." One-time deal...I definitely do not recommend this recipe to others.