Computer Fires: How Vulnerable is Your PC?
This article explains the dangers posed by computer fires and the solutions availble to elimnate the problem
Fire and
explosions are one of the leading causes of accidental death. Each year 4,000
people a year are killed in the US alone and a further 25,000 are left injured
and often maimed or scarred for life.
Whilst fires
and explosions have a multitude of causes, three things are always required:
fuel, oxygen and a source of ignition. Fires
start when a fuel (from paper in a litter bin to petrol in a fuel tank) is
ignited by a spark and the following explosion/inferno is kept alive by the
oxygen in the atmosphere.
Of course
there is little we can do about the oxygen in the atmosphere but we can reduce
the amount of combustibles lying around, making sure areas are swept clean of
paper or litter, but what about sources of ignition?
Many fires
are caused by faulty electrical equipment a spark or short from a circuit board
can arc setting alight any combustible material it comes into contact with. We
can of course make sure all electrical equipment is off before we leave the
work place, but how practical is this? What about that old IBM workhorse that
is left on overnight or the servers left humming in the back room?
A computer monitor left on
overnight at a newspaper office in Virginia, as
it had been for many years, was, although not in a particular
hazardous area, responsible for completely gutting the offices of the
Carolina Coast and Virginian-Pilot newspapers as the amount of
newspaper lying around provided enough fuel to destroy over
a decades’ worth of records.
Computers
that work in particular hazardous environments, where there is a risk of
explosion or fire, such as chemical factory, have to be sealed, ensuring any
fault in the electrical equipment does not spark. However these systems are
expensive, particularly when the IT has to be upgraded and the whole unit has
to be discarded.
This is of
course an impractical solution for those who work in environments not deemed a
potential risk and many companies opt to save their money. However, these same
companies spend thousands on anti-virus, spyware and firewall systems to keep
their data safe from malicious hackers. However, if your entire computer (an
perhaps office or factory) goes up in smoke, how safe is your data then?
There is a
solution, for computers and other electrical equipment (including monitors,
printers) , in the shape of specialist industrial enclosures. These can be made from a
variety of materials from food-grade stainless steel to cheaper plastic
varieties. These enclosures can also protect equipment from knocks and bangs
and some are even bomb-proof!
If you have a machine left on overnight or perhaps out in
the warehouse amongst the dust and dirt – perhaps an enclosure could save you
the time and trouble of not only replacing your data and computer but perhaps
the entire building!
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Richard N Williams is a technical author and a
specialist in the industrial computer industry helping to develop industrial pc
enclosures and protection for all environments.
Please visit us for more information about industrial computer solutions.
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