Dayton Daily News

National organizati­on conducts fire tests here

Group’s results could impact firefighti­ng around the world.

- By Bonnie Meibers Staff Writer

Fire department­s from all over the country have flocked to Fairborn to study fire and firefighte­r safety.

Underwrite­rs Laboratori­es, a fire safety research group, has conducted fire experiment­s in Fairborn since Sept. 13. Their final experiment will be Thursday, a researcher said.

Fairborn Fire Chief Dave Reichert said this week’s study was one of the first done on a commercial building.

“Fairborn has the ability to impact firefighti­ng worldwide,” Reichert said.

A number of fires were lit in the old Skyway Shopping Plaza on Kauffman Avenue, which will be demolished after the study and become the city’s new

public works facility. Fair- born, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Beavercree­k and Goshen fire department­s helped put out the fires.

Fairbo r n M a yor Paul Keller started the first fire Tuesday with the click of a button. Black smoke bil- lowed out of the old shop- ping center as the group tested how changing ventilatio­n affected the flames.

Conducting the study in a vacant building, rather than in a lab, allows researcher­s to get as close to the real thing as possible, Reichert said.

John Ceriello, a captain with FDNY who sits on the advisory board for UL, said a lot of what the researcher­s want to learn is driven by questions asked by firefighte­rs.

“Firefighte­rs have a vested interest in other firefight- ers,” Reichert said. “I have a vested interest in making sure my guys and gals go home safely at the end of the day.”

Jack Regan, a research engine e r with UL, said studies like this are a firsthand look at what protocol could help firefighte­rs in the future.

Inside the test site there are temperatur­e probes, called “temperatur­e trees,” that relay back to researcher­s what temperatur­e the room gets throughout the experiment. Researcher­s put carpet in the room and stacked cardboard boxes filled with plastic cups to simulate how a real convenienc­e store or warehouse might burn.

Regan said UL used plastic cups and cardboard boxes because they understand how those materials burn.

Ray McCormack, a lieutenant with the FDNY, sits on the technical board. He said having veteran firefighte­rs on the board to bring real-life experience helps define the various experiment­s.

“In the end we’re basically selling the end results to the fire service, so it has to be a mix of science and the streets,” McCormack said.

In a couple of months, the results of the studies conducted in Fairborn will be shared with firefighte­rs around the world. These department­s can watch and learn new tactics from a study like this, Ceriello said.

 ?? CHUCK HAMLIN / STAFF ?? Underwrite­rs Laboratori­es, a fire safety research group, has been conducting experiment­s in Fairborn since Sept. 13. Fire department­s from all over the country have flocked here to study fire and firefighte­r safety.
CHUCK HAMLIN / STAFF Underwrite­rs Laboratori­es, a fire safety research group, has been conducting experiment­s in Fairborn since Sept. 13. Fire department­s from all over the country have flocked here to study fire and firefighte­r safety.

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