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<p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">George Davidson wrote:</span></p>
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<div dir="ltr">One note we were always given is that the mist systems displace the oxygen, so get the hell out if it goes off.</div>
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<p>I think whoever said that was conflating water mist systems with something else. Yes, Carbon Dioxide extinguishers (and many other gases, for that matter) will displace oxygen. Yes, Halon and it's newer flavors will bind to oxygen and render it useless. Fires, of course, will consume oxygen. </p>
<p>But water mist displacing oxygen? Not buying it. I can't remember getting light-headed the last time I walked through a fog bank or a rain shower. If fog displaced oxygen, then most of San Francisco would be an uninhabitable wasteland. ;)</p>
<p>However, I have seen several movies where bad creatures would emerge from the fog. </p>
<p>As an interesting aside, some very benign things will also consume oxygen, rust being one of them. The mention of ships reminded me of this: There have been more than a few sailors who have died from asphyxiation when they climbed down into the chain locker (a large storage compartment in a ship which holds the anchor chain when it's not deployed). The air inside the compartment turned out to have very little oxygen because the rusting process on the chain had slowly consumed it. It was a cautionary tale to never enter a confined space without ventilating it thoroughly first. </p>
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