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Fire Extinguishers74 of 169Antique Eddison Fire Extinguisher Pat. Sept 3, 1889VINTAGE ANTIQUE QUICK AID MODEL SA 303 FIRE EXTINGUISHER
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    Posted 11 years ago

    huey
    (52 items)

    these are red comet fire grenades that have been hanging in my grandfathers house since 1931.i have 4 of them seems like it would have to be a real small fire for this to work and im not sure i want to know whats in them

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    Comments

    1. walksoftly walksoftly, 11 years ago
      They look nice but are very hazardous! They most likely contain carbon tetrachloride, a dangerous chemical. At that time the dangers of its use to the body were unknown. It can cause damage to the lungs, liver, kidneys and the brain. The carbon tetrachloride is easily absorbed into the body through the skin and lungs. People of the late 1800's were not aware of this.
      It is now banned and is considered a hazardous material.
      Contact your local fire dept. to see what to do with them.
    2. pops52 pops52, 11 years ago
      Very interesting!
    3. LOUMANAL LOUMANAL, 11 years ago
      This one doesn't seem to have a trigger mechanism that contained a spring with a hammer and a magnesium plug. When the magnesium plug melted (in a fire), the hammer would be released and would break the sealed Carbon Tetrachloride ball. This one was probably a "Throw at the fire" type of grenade. RER(BOB)
    4. AzTom AzTom, 11 years ago
      The early ones were salt water.

      If that's cigarette smoke on the glass, I'd be more worried about it than the CT. Although CT was faded out of the fire extinguishers in the 50's, I think dry cleaners used it into the 70,s.
      We had a few 55 gal drums of CT in the 60's that we used to wash grease off of car parts. Yep, bent over an open pan with a brush splashing around the parts till clean.
      The good o'l days,lol
    5. huey huey, 11 years ago
      thanks guys,tom my grandfater was a smoker way back when.mabe ill try to clean them very carefully

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