Fire Safety Equipment  
Fire Safety Equipment

Fire Safety Equipment


Fire is dangerous and not something to be toyed with, unless you’re a pyro – and then you can’t help it. But it’s still going to hurt if you don’t have the right safety equipment. No matter what your intentions are with fire, even when you’re a professional in the fire safety field, having the proper fire safety equipment will make the difference between enjoying the flames and getting burned to a crisp.

Your Fire Safety Equipment List

Depending on your needs and your goals for fire safety equipment, you may or may not need all of these pieces:

  • Emergency Lights
  • Eye Protection
  • Exit Signs
  • Eyewash
  • Fall Protection
  • Fire Safety Literature
  • First Aid
  • Flashlights
  • Foot Protection
  • Gloves
  • Head Protection
  • Hearing Protection
  • Heat Stress
  • Mirrors
  • Protective Clothing
  • Respiratory
  • Safety Air Guns
  • Safety Cans
  • Safety Storage
  • Signs
  • Sorbents
  • Traffic Control
  • Training Programs

Many of these items will be provided to those who are in the fire safety field, but they can also be purchased online or at stores specifically dedicated to fire safety.

The Way Equipment Protects You

What you might not realize at first is that fire safety equipment protects in a few different ways.

  • Prevention of burns – When you’re wearing certain pieces of fire safety equipment, it will be resistant to heat, so you will not become burned, assuming you don’t stay in the direct flame for a long period of time.
  • Management of heat – In other cases, the fire equipment is not meant to be in the fire directly, but it will keep you from getting too hot while you find your way out or you perform a certain task for a short period of time.
  • Reduction of fire – Other fire safety equipment is designed to help you put out the flames or to make them less pervasive until another fire truck can arrive.
  • Fire safety education – Of course, preventing fires is the best way to avoid troubles with them. If you can educate others on how to handle and how to prevent fires, then more people can be safe.

No matter what your interest in fire safety equipment, the more you can educate yourself and others, the safer everyone will be.