Firefighters show off amazing new way to extinguish flames by blasting them with sound, not water

The sound you can’t hear might just save your house.It sounds like something out of a sci-fi blockbuster, but firefighters in California are firing up a fascinating new way to fight flames — with sound waves.The San Bernardino County Fire Department recently showed off a futuristic system that detects and extinguishes flames without water or chemicals.Instead, it uses powerful — but completely silent — sound vibrations to snuff out the fire itself.The red-hot technology, inspired by NASA experiments and developed by Sonic Fire Tech, works by first spotting flames with infrared sensors and AI.

Once a fire is detected, the system instantly releases specially tuned sound waves aimed right at it.It isn’t magic, it’s physics, said the developers.“For a fire to burn, you need three things — fuel, heat and oxygen,” Remington Hotchkis, chief commercialization officer at Sonic Fire Tech, told the Post.“Sound waves vibrate the oxygen faster than the fuel can use it, and break the chemical reaction of the flame.“The system uses thermal detectors to sense the flame, or conditions for the flame and initiates the acoustic defense.”The flame fizzles out in seconds.During a live demo on March 31, firefighters at the San Bernardino County Fire Department tested the device, which is worn like a “Ghostbusters” Proton Pack-type backpack, and showed how the technology could extinguish trouble before it grows.And firefighters loved it.“If you keep a fire small because it was detected right away, that’s going to save money, that’s going to help insurance rates,” said Ryan Beckers of the San Bernardino Fire Dept.The fire-fighting technology could be a game-changer, especially in wildfire-prone areas and inside homes by helping stop small sparks from turning into full-blown infernos, Sonic Fire Tech explained.Unlike traditional methods, it won’t soak buildings with water or leave behind chemical residue.The system’s low-frequency infrasound is harml...

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Publisher: New York Post

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