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flashover
[ flash-oh-ver ]
noun
- Electricity. a disruptive discharge around or over the surface of a solid or liquid insulator.
- the moment of conflagration or complete incineration caused by superheated air or combustibles.
verb (used without object)
- Electricity. to have or experience a flashover.
flashover
/ ˈ´Ú±ôæʃˌəʊ±¹É™ /
noun
- an electric discharge over or around the surface of an insulator
- the sudden and rapid spread of fire through the air, caused by the ignition of smoke or fumes from surrounding objects
51³Ô¹Ï History and Origins
Origin of flashover1
Example Sentences
But Vaillant also characterizes the wildfire as a “regional apocalypse†and imminent flashover—the point of spontaneous combustion in an enclosed space—as “a malevolent entity from another dimension breaking through to this one.â€
Getting hotter, it soon reaches 1,128 degrees, and carbon monoxide in the smoke combusts — a flashover — propelling flames further.
The CFD, according to a report on the incident from Chicago's Fox 32 News, said the injuries were caused by a flashover at the fire.
It look less than five minutes for the heat to become so intense that it ignited all surfaces in the first room, something experts call “flashover.â€
And the video footage appeared to show "flashover," when every combustible thing in an area is burning, he said.
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