
The 5th Element of Fire is Defined Today By It's Discoverer, David E. Jones - New Scientific Understanding of Fire Revealed On August the 13th 2003 a Successful demonstration of the NESFED fire control system putting out small fires was held at the Dayton Fire Department's Fire Academy located in Dayton Ohio. The demonstration was held in the Academy's test fire burn facilities tower. Officials present to witness this historic event. Dayton Fire Capt.Jeffrey Payne and CEO Bill Grilliot and Tom Stachler VP Manufacturing Engineer of the Total Fire Group located in greater Dayton as well as other fire fighters that looked on. Giving the demonstration was the discoverer of the 5th element, inventor David E. Jones (PRWEB) April 5, 2005 On August the 13th 2003 a Successful demonstration of the NESFED fire control system putting out small fires at the Dayton Fire Department's Fire Academy located in Dayton Ohio. The demonstration was held in the Academy's test fire burn facilities tower. Officials present to witness this historic event. Dayton Fire Capt.Jeffrey Payne and CEO Bill Grilliot and Tom Stachler VP Manufacturing Engineer of the Total Fire Group located in greater Dayton as well as other fire fighters that looked on. Giving the demonstration was the discoverer of the 5th element,inventor David E. Jones. The demonstration showed how electricity alone can be used in controlling or extinguishing a fire without the need of using water or chemicals. The NESFED system uses only electric power to combat fires by manipulating the newly discovered fire plume's 5th element. The demonstration was successful in extinguishing paper, plastics, butane, and a kerosene soaked foam polystyrene plastic pad. Now the 5th element of fire has been defined today by the discoverer, David E. Jones. The 5th element of fire is the electrostatic charges present and necessary on each the hot gas molecules within the fire's plume. These electrostatic charges are critical for fire to exist. Ever try to start a fire in a very damp place? We all know electrostatic formation is greatly enhanced in dry environments like in the winter's dry air. People easily get shocked when they come in contact with each other and other objects in the winter because of static electric buildup due to the dry air. "Uncontrolled" discharges of electrostatic enegery can cause a fire as well. Some insects use electrostatic charges on their wings to help them fly in the molecules of the air! Fires in homes are greater in number in the dry winter months. Fires are a big problem in dry places like California. Fires love dry environments which helps the electrostatic charges to form which are necessary in the fire's flame and can easily develop them in dry climates. One of the driest places on the Earth is within the fire's flame where these electrostatic charges develop. Each of the hot gas molecules within the fire's flame have the same positive charge on them which causes them to repel each other. The atmospheric pressure compresses against the hot gas molecules of the flame causing them to be properly spaced but still stay close enough together despite of the electrostatic repulsion of each hot gas molecules with each other, this keeps the flame properly formed and allows the fire's rapid oxidation process to become balanced. Gravity further helps the convectional flow of hot gasses as well, which enhances the fires intensity and organization. It is these electrostatic charges on the individual hot gas molecules within the fire's plume that can be exploited from a short distance away from the fire. You can control the fire's flame by using special powerful electrostatic fields to interact with the charges on the gas molecules. Like electric charges repel, unlike electric charges attract. Novel combinations of opposing polarities of HV fields and frequencies can rip apart the flame of a fire extinguishing it in a second or so. It is because of the newly discovered electrostatic charges on the hot gasses within a fire's plume that the fire itself now can be controlled and even be extinguished using only the power of electricity. Someday, even large forest fires can be totally controlled and extinguished immediately using only the power of electricity, says the discoverer of the 5th element of fire, David E. Jones. ###
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