B-Foam

Making Finished B-Foam is identical to making A-Foam (W + Conc (=Sol) + A + A = F). The difference being the Concentrate (Conc) and the % Solution (W + Conc). B-Foam is not a detergent, and is formulated for Class B Hydrocarbon Fuels and is generally mixed at 1%, 3% or 6% Solution.

Recommend Never use Class A Foam on a Class B Fuel or Fire!
Recommend Never use Class B Foam on a Class A Fuel or Fire!

B-Foam rejects carbon and is designed to form a vapor barrier over a contained spill.

A-Foam can reduce the surface tension of a hydrocarbon fuel causing it to seep deeper into the ground making recovery difficult and expensive. A-Foam does not form a vapor barrier leaving firefighters exposed to dangerous flash ignitions of hydrocarbon vapors. REPEAT – Do not use A-Foam on a B Fuel.

NFPA  created the A, B, C & D fuel type classifications just for this purpose. Class A Foam is designed for Class A Fires. Class A Foam is water – not to be used on Class B, C or D Fires.

NFPA Fuel Classification Symbols

“B-Foam” requires separate and intensive training to DO NO HARM!!

NEVER MIX A & B Foams together.

For more information on B-Foam – visit the B-Foam Coalition Site.

Mixing A & B Foam causes an almost instant gel reaction – very bad for the system.

B-Foam – How Much is Needed

NOTE – B-Foam use requires special training. This page is presented for basic knowledge and thinking only – it cannot be considered appropriate training for B-Foam use. CompressedAirFoam.com is not designed to be considered an adequate Class B training resource. This should also be considered a SAFETY Hazard Topic. How much B-Foam does it take? …

Firefighting Foam Banned

URGENT – FireFighting Foam Banned All the bad publicity regarding PFOA’s (Forever Chemicals) in “Fire Fighting Foam” is a misrepresentation of all Fire Fighting Foams. The PFOA’s were found in one (1) type of Class B Foam. There are NO PFOA’s in Class A Fire Fighting Foam. As of this posting, CompressedAirFoam.com is not aware …