Sujet : Re: OT: Typical Globlist
De : JL (at) *nospam* gct.com (john larkin)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 19. Jan 2025, 17:17:12
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <d98qoj558p5qvmagl31kj34fuamdjequc7@4ax.com>
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On Sun, 19 Jan 2025 13:10:58 +0000, Cursitor Doom <
cd@notformail.com>
wrote:
On Sun, 19 Jan 2025 09:49:31 +0000, liz@poppyrecords.invalid.invalid
(Liz Tuddenham) wrote:
>
Bill Sloman <bill.sloman@ieee.org> wrote:
>
[...]
The proposition that radiant heat generated by one burning would set off
an adjacent house is pretty dumb. Fire codes are written to make sure
that houses aren't vulnerable in that way.
>
In that case, what spread the fire?
>
Airborne embers I would guess.
That shouldn't be allowed to happen, but the breeze was offshore when
that seaside strip burned.
Sloman snipped my link of course. He does that when reality interferes
with his theories.
There are many pics of the LA fire, and of Paradise and Lahaina.
Houses set houses on fire, leaving rubble and green trees. The fire
codes, and especially enforcement, were criminally stupid in all those
cases.
Our cabin in the mountains is not very flammible from radiation or
grass fires or from embers, and the local enforcement of defensible
space rules are brutal. Steel roof, no gutters, no attic with vents,
first floor is concrete blocks.
https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/i9tvka59d0mizo5e5qxnn/Sides.jpg?rlkey=qbzapwuvtju7bjoswnfu1gmhc&raw=1We are required to trim tree limbs and remove pine needles and scrub
bushes and such. Housing density is low by design.
There's a forestry department that inspects every property and issues
periodic reports too.
Humans have known about fire for dozens of years by now.