 five-minute slide program, was it? OK, now, your class of the fire is easy to classify. All you have to do is ask yourself, what's burning? Well, self is very intelligent. They don't come back while I got paper, wood, papers, plastic, textiles, gas lanes, or fuels, compressed gases, or electrical. This is good because, hey, then you classify. But you have to be able to classify. We do not correctly classify the fires. We eat the wrong extinction agent. We have a lot of problems. We definitely don't want that in a way. And you are very limited to your selection of extinction agents, correct? Up there, what have you got? You've got the halon. And that's it. But halon is real good. Better than nothing, right? It's better in a lot of things. OK, for class A, all it is is wood, paper, cloth, plastic, textiles, anything will leave a national number, and they're easily deep-seated. So what you want to do here is you want to cool it, coat it, soak it. So while we're going after there on the tetrahedron type thing is water. Water, you want to cool it? It was cool, fuelable, oxygenation temperature, and it goes out. OK, your class B fires are your flammable liquids and gasses, kerosene. OK, next up we have is your class Cs, is your energized electric equipment. And the first thing you want to do there, like it says, avoid shock. The easiest way to do that is by de-energizing it. So we know where it is. We know the switch. We should cut it off. You de-energized it. So what you have done there, you have eliminated the electrical shock probability of it. This is what we want to do, is keep ourselves, basically, pretty well safe from the noise. Sir, they're an age limit on being an astronaut. We get CO2s first. Then after everybody gets CO2s, we'll do the dry chems. And after we do that, we'll move on to the hoses. All right, go ahead. It's a recall from it, right? Yeah. Yeah, a little bit. Sure. OK, our bottle's over there. And we'll come up here on the hoses. OK, now, all you do is rotate this for your various patterns. OK? We're going to start off with a fog pattern. We're going to have plenty of time to get these regulated before we get into the fire. So we'll start off with a full fog pattern in front of us. OK, I'm going to be right between you and the first two fires. And the last fire, if you want, you take me and I. Let me see this one again. I think maybe a little bit too tall. Yeah, because this one kind of pulls up and distorts a little bit. We'll go with the small. It's like that, huh? OK. This turned into more. OK. Yeah, I guess that's fine. Is your finger's way down in there? I think it needs to come back toward me. Yeah. Is that all right? Yeah. If you're comfortable. Yeah. I'm going to push the box further out, I think. OK. As long as you're fairly comfortable, you're the one that's got to sit there for an hour. Do you have the mold in my hand that you took last time? Yes. Maybe I'll cut the whole thing to cover me. I'm just going to say that I'm a little bit pampered. Yeah. You have the white color. The hand, the mold they make of this thing is. OK. We'll be cutting away this excess that we're getting on the top of his hand. And getting rid of that. And then we'll vacillate the entire top area. And once that is completed, we'll pour the second half on top of it, fill up the box with the RTV. And this way we'll be able to separate it when we take it apart. Is that right? OK. Look at some of our brown shots that we were training with up at the Fort Worth Theater. They even got one of that little town rat interest to the grain of candy up there. That little thing is got a big joint. I don't remember. They had something you put on your head. Yeah. They injected stuff? I don't remember. I really don't remember. This one is out of town. Is this? I never had the form of the ski boots. Slider on out. I'm pulling. It's a lot tighter than the last one. And they're vacuumed. It also took a lot more hair that time. OK. I've done a good job with greasing that stuff up. I'll take your word for it that that looks like my hand. It'll come out and look something like that with your thumb straight. OK.