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Fire Extinguisher Disposal


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Over the years I have accumulated a number of BCF fire extinguishers in the workshop, (mainly because I have never had to use one, thank goodness).

Needless to say that through neglect on my part the powder contents have solidified and I understand that the extinguishers will no longer work even though they may still be fully gassed.

The question is, how can I dispose of them safely? Any advice would be gratefully received.

Pete

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I took an old Halon (wish we could still buy them) fire extinguisher to my local recycling centre and asked how to dispose of it.

"Oh no, we can't take that" I was told. "You'll have to ring the council and arrange for them to deal with it". "There will be a charge though".

"But it's empty" I said, showing them that pulling the trigger had no effect and it had no weight to it. "That doesn't matter, we can't take it".

I took it home, put it in a plastic bag and dropped it off in the "not suitable for recycling" skip the next time I went. Very environmentally friendly!

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Pete, do you mean BCF or powder? BCF is a halon, so disposal is very different.

The powder is relatively harmless as it's either ammonium phosphate, which is a fertiliser, or potassium or sodium bicarbonate. If it's the type with a gauge, it's a stored pressure extinguisher so needs to be fired to make it safe; if there's no gauge, it will be a cartridge type which can be opened easily (the head assembly screws off), these usually have a wider neck and will have no sign of a gas fill valve. With the cartridge type, you could tip out the powder into the bin, reassemble the extinguisher and fire it in safety.

Halon is a very tricky substance to deal with owing to ozone depleting chemical regulations.

Alternatively, let the local fire brigade set it off for you!

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The fiasco with the extinguisher reminds me of the time when I took a gallon of used motor oil to the dump and duly poured it into the large tank provided to take it. When I asked one of the blokes what I should do with the now empty plastic container, I was told that I couldn't put it with the plastic recyclables as it was contaminated with oil and they couldn't deal with it.

Edited By Cuban8 on 05/10/2017 18:03:07

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  • 1 month later...

Our tip used to have a bin next to the oil container for the "contaminated" cans last time I went the bin was gone and was told to throw can in the land fill rubbish ! Simmilarly I used to buy my engine oil in 20 liter drums and put the old oil in an empty 20 liter drum to save keep going to the tip . Jobs worth recycling attendant said when half of it was poured "you cant empty that into waste oil thats trade oil " ? The worlds gone mad !!!

Did you find a way to dispose of your old extinguishers?

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Hi

I had/ve this problem. I tried the Fire Station and they sent me to the council tip. Council tip said, “No way” so I still have the extinguisher albeit many years old now. Thinking of ‘phoning’ the Council?

This is part of the whole problem that leads to “fly-tipping”.

S

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