NFPA 10 Study Guide Actual Exam
2026/2027 – Complete Exam-Style Questions
with Detailed Rationales | 100% Verified |
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[SECTION 1: Fire Classes & Extinguisher Types — Questions 1-15]
Q1: Which of the following best describes a Class A fire?
A. Fires involving flammable liquids like gasoline or oil.
B. Fires involving energized electrical equipment.
C. Fires involving ordinary combustibles such as wood, paper, and cloth. [CORRECT]
D. Fires involving combustible metals like magnesium or sodium.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Class A fires involve ordinary combustible materials such as wood, paper, cloth,
rubber, and many plastics. These materials typically form glowing embers and leave ash.
Extinguishers rated for Class A (like Water or ABC Dry Chemical) cool the fuel or coat it to
remove oxygen. Options A, B, and D describe Class B, Class C, and Class D fires, respectively.
Q2: You are responding to a fire involving a deep fat fryer in a commercial kitchen. Which class
of fire extinguisher is specifically designed and required for this type of hazard?
A. Class A
B. Class B
C. Class K [CORRECT]
D. Class D
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Class K fires involve cooking oils and fats (vegetable or animal) and are common in
commercial kitchens. Class K extinguishers use a wet chemical agent that creates a foaming
,2
reaction (saponification) to cool and seal the surface, preventing re-ignition. While some Class B
or ABC extinguishers can put out grease fires, they lack the cooling properties to prevent re-flash
and are not the primary choice per NFPA 10 for modern high-efficiency appliances. Class D is
for metals, and Class A is for wood/paper.
Q3: Which extinguishing agent is known for leaving no residue, making it ideal for use on
sensitive electronic equipment (Class C fires), but has a limited range and poor visibility during
discharge?
A. Dry Chemical (Monoammonium Phosphate)
B. Carbon Dioxide (CO2) [CORRECT]
C. Water (APW)
D. Foam (AFFF)
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Carbon Dioxide (CO2) is a clean agent that leaves no residue, making it perfect for
offices, server rooms, and electrical equipment. It extinguishes by displacing oxygen. However,
it dissipates quickly, is heavier than air (requiring careful application), and the discharge creates
a dense cloud that reduces visibility for the operator. Dry chemical leaves a corrosive residue,
and Water/APW conducts electricity and damages electronics.
Q4: A dry chemical extinguisher labeled "ABC" contains which primary agent?
A. Sodium Bicarbonate
B. Potassium Bicarbonate
C. Monoammonium Phosphate [CORRECT]
D. Purple K
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: ABC-rated dry chemical extinguishers typically contain monoammonium phosphate
as the active agent. This yellow powder is effective on Class A, B, and C fires. It works by
forming a coating (melting) on Class A fuels and interfering with the chemical chain reaction of
Class B fires. Sodium and Potassium bicarbonate (Options A and B) are typically found in BC-
,3
rated extinguishers (often purple "K" for potassium bicarbonate) and are generally not effective
on Class A fires.
Q5: Why is a Water (APW) extinguisher dangerous to use on a Class B (flammable liquid) fire?
A. It freezes upon contact, spreading the fire.
B. Water is conductive and will electrocute the user.
C. Water is heavier than most flammable liquids and can cause the burning liquid to spread.
[CORRECT]
D. It lacks sufficient pressure to reach the fire.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Most flammable liquids (Class B) are lighter than water (hydrocarbons). When water
is applied, it sinks to the bottom of the burning liquid, heats up rapidly, boils, and expands
violently, causing the burning liquid to splash or spread over a larger area (slop-over). Water also
does not smother the vapors effectively. Additionally, Water (APW) must never be used on Class
C (electrical) fires due to conductivity risk, but the primary danger with Class B is spreading the
fuel.
Q6: Which type of extinguishing agent works by smothering the fire and forming a film that
floats on the surface of flammable liquids?
A. Halon
B. Foam (AFFF) [CORRECT]
C. Dry Powder (Class D)
D. Carbon Dioxide
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Foam agents, such as Aqueous Film Forming Foam (AFFF) or Film-Forming
Fluoroprotein (FFFP), are designed for Class A and B fires. They work by forming a blanket that
floats on the surface of the liquid fuel, separating it from oxygen and suppressing vapors. Dry
powder (Option C) is for combustible metals (Class D), and Halon (Option A) is a clean gas that
interrupts the chemical chain reaction but is ozone-depleting and largely phased out.
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Q7: What is the primary extinguishing mechanism for a standard Halon or Halotron (Clean
Agent) extinguisher?
A. Cooling
B. Smothering
C. Interruption of the chemical chain reaction [CORRECT]
D. Displacing the fuel
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Halon and Halotron are "clean agents" primarily designed for Class B and C fires.
They extinguish fires mostly by interrupting the chemical chain reaction of the fire (stopping the
combustion reaction) rather than just cooling or smothering. Halotron is a substitute for Halon,
which was banned for new production under the Montreal Protocol due to ozone depletion
potential.
Q8: Which extinguisher type uses a sodium chloride or copper powder agent specifically
designed for fires involving combustible metals like magnesium, titanium, or sodium?
A. Class K Wet Chemical
B. Class D Dry Powder [CORRECT]
C. ABC Dry Chemical
D. Carbon Dioxide
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Class D fires require a specific "Dry Powder" agent (not to be confused with "Dry
Chemical" used on ABC fires). These agents are designed to smother the fire and absorb heat
without reacting violently with the metal. Using water, CO2, or standard ABC extinguishers on
combustible metals can cause violent reactions or explosions. The agent is often applied gently
rather than sprayed aggressively.
Q9: In the fire extinguisher rating system, what does the number "4" preceding the letter "A" on
a 4-A extinguisher indicate?