Am 23.04.2015 um 19:43 schrieb Craig Wallace:
> fire_extinguisher:class:uk=8A 55B 75F
In general and also valid here:
Please, add the LC to to value and not to the key. This way we only need
one tag and not one for every country.
fire_extinguisher:class=UK:8A;UK:55B;UK:75F
Thanks fly
2015-04-24 11:34 GMT+02:00 Florian LAINEZ :
>
>
>1. Describe the classes: they are not standard internationally and I
>think we should avoid them
>
>
+1
>
>1. Describe the local classes: not suitable worldwide
>
>
as long as you have correct country / standard namespaces, you can
Hi everyone, thanks for your feedback, I can see that the topic is much
more complicated than I expected.
Let's sum up our proposals:
1. Describe the classes fire_extinguisher_class=A
2. Describe the local classes fire_extinguisher_class:uk=8A 55B 75F
3. Describe the combustible fire_ext
> Am 24.04.2015 um 01:46 schrieb Warin <61sundow...@gmail.com>:
>
> Extinguishers are placed by the requirements of possible fires in that
> location. So if you find one local to the fire it should be suitable for use
> there. Thus added tagging should serve little to no purpose.
yes, it i
> On Apr 24, 2015, at 8:46 AM, Warin <61sundow...@gmail.com> wrote:
> they look at the colour.
I agree that the letter codes wouldn't be used when looking for an
extinguisher, but it is used for managing them. The color codes are not
universal either.
Also, here in Japan there are hello kit
While fire extinguishers have various codes ...
Extinguishers are placed by the requirements of possible fires in that
location. So if you find one local to the fire it should be suitable for
use there. Thus added tagging should serve little to no purpose.
Sorry to be so practical but people
The fire type is most important, but depending on the material used, it can be
used on several types -
So +1 for tagging the material first and foremost.
Most common household extinguishers in the US are dry powder ABC extinguishers.
At the bottom of the #united states section is a conversion
On Thu, Apr 23, 2015 at 10:43 AM, Craig Wallace
wrote:
>
> In the UK, the class is not printed huge letters. They main thing they are
> labelled with is the contents of the extinguisher, with a coloured stripe.
> ie red for water, blue for powder, black for CO2.
>
Then tag whatever's visible if t
On 2015-04-23 18:01, Bryce Nesbitt wrote:
On Thu, Apr 23, 2015 at 5:31 AM, mailto:p...@trigpoint.me.uk>> wrote:
That makes much more sense, and as you say, maps the physical
characteristics.
The letters seem like specialist knowledge that few people will be
aware of.
Phil (t
> Am 23.04.2015 um 19:01 schrieb Bryce Nesbitt :
>
> Putting the translation into OSM will help exactly zero people use the right
> extinguisher in a real fire.
why? There won't be a letter on the fire, so you would anyway have to make an
adaptation to your situation.
The tags won't neces
On Thu, Apr 23, 2015 at 5:31 AM, wrote:
> That makes much more sense, and as you say, maps the physical
> characteristics.
> The letters seem like specialist knowledge that few people will be aware
> of.
> Phil (trigpoint )
But the letter codes are exactly what's printed in huge letters right
That makes much more sense, and as you say, maps the physical characteristics.
The letters seem like specialist knowledge that few people will be aware of.
Phil (trigpoint )
On Thu Apr 23 13:11:46 2015 GMT+0100, Florian LAINEZ wrote:
> Thanks for the feedback.
> I am not expert at all on the
Thanks for the feedback.
I am not expert at all on the topic therefore I am open to describe with
literal description.
I just double checked in my office (in France) and couldn't find easily any
"literal" mention. One the other way the class A and B were clearly
mentioned.
Therefore I think we will
On Thu Apr 23 10:38:13 2015 GMT+0100, Florian LAINEZ wrote:
> Hi, it's the first time I write to this mailing list, I am a french
> contributor interested in train stations.
>
> I want to describe more precisely an extinguisher and I have seen the tag
> emergency=fire_extinguisher that is used de
2015-04-23 11:38 GMT+02:00 Florian LAINEZ :
> What about adding some details regarding the type with fire_extinguisher=A
> for an extinguisher class A?
>
The classification system seems to vary between different regions, see here
for a comparison table:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_extingui
Hi, it's the first time I write to this mailing list, I am a french
contributor interested in train stations.
I want to describe more precisely an extinguisher and I have seen the tag
emergency=fire_extinguisher that is used de facto.
What about adding some details regarding the type with fire_ext
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