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by jsumrall
4104 days ago
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It pushes/removes the air, so the fire goes out. As I read, this was something that's been researched but it's not useful for anything but blowing out candles, since in a real fire whatever's burning will just reignite since the burning material is not cooled or anything. Simply, the flame is suppressed momentarily. |
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As long as you can continue to "suppress it momentarily" long enough for the material to cool below its ignition point, you've solved the problem.