12.5
20
A person will need a total of one gallon of water per person for each day. This water can be used for both drinking and sanitation purposes. Homeowners should keep at least 3 days worth of water per person.
water is not sucked in by fire. fire is like a magnet to water but they do not connect. when water is added to fire some of the water evaporates or / and weaken the fire
fire and water are opposites
no, fire does not work well with water and the water can only be used to exstinguish the fire.
Fire feeds on oxygen, and water does not have much of it.
A standard fire hose is 50 feet long. A hose this length with a 2-inch radius grants about 4.36 cubic feet. This volume holds 32 gallons of water.
Sure just throw it into a big pot of oil that is on fire while ducking your head water fifty gallons of water and stay there for fifty year you will tell
it can hold anywhere from 750-1000 gallons of water
Some smile engines like a brush truck may only have a few hundred gallons of water. Large tanker trucks may carry thousands of gallons of water to a fire.
Lots, but how can you measure it
many can drop about 200 gallons, but it is usually fire retardant rather than water
they carry an assortment of tools and can carry hundreds of gallons of water.
A person will need a total of one gallon of water per person for each day. This water can be used for both drinking and sanitation purposes. Homeowners should keep at least 3 days worth of water per person.
You do not use water to extinguish fuel fires. Water will only spread it.
Pi x Radius Squared x length in inches / 231 ci in a gallon 3.14 x 2 squared x 50 feet x 12 inches = 7,536/231 = 32.6 Gallons
We use a number from 75 gallons to 100 gallons per person to work up the capacity needed for a water system. This number would not include other things such as fire portection.
Depends on the fire engine, there are many different sizes and holds many different amounts of water