I and a number of other ASH25M owners in Aus have installed Safecraft systems 
in recent years. See:

http://www.aircraftspruce.com/catalog/pspages/safecraft5.php

These were shipped empty from the US. We engaged a specialist firm in Melbourne 
to re-charge them with Halon.

For safety this system is cable operated by pulling a handle mounted on or near 
the instrument panel. Two separate metal discharge lines from the cylinder run 
the Halon to dispersant heads on the floor of the engine bay; one fore in the 
vicinity of the fuel injection area and one aft in the vicinity of the oil 
supply system.

I'm reasonably confident that if the engine bay doors are closed the 3lb 
cylinder we have installed would have sufficient capacity to extinguish a 
substantive fire in this enclosed space. I am somewhat less confident of the 
fire extinguishing efficacy of the system if the power plant is erected and the 
engine bay doors are open.

Hence the functionality of the system is fundamentally dependent upon early 
detection and action to properly shut the power plant down and retract it into 
the fuselage while it is still feasible to do so.

The certified "detection" system installed in the aircraft during manufacture 
comprises a single bi-metal strip activated spot sensor embedded in the 
starboard side upper engine bay fire wall towards the front. It is inadequate 
to be relied upon.

We have looked at installing a ring of linear heat detector cable of the type 
James has pointed to however the trick is working out placement and what level 
of ambient and alarm sensitivity to employ. Even then relying on an automatic 
system with so many variables in play seems fraught.

I'm tending to the view of installing the fairly sensitive wire heat detector 
system to provide a heads up alert to the pilot and then resorting on a rear 
viewing infra red camera relaying an image of the power plant to a small screen 
in or near the instrument panel enabling an assessment of what may really be 
going on back there.

Comments on this approach or thoughts on a better one anyone?

Regards

Dion

On 12/01/2013, at 08:37 , Simon Hackett wrote:

> Noting that I've never seen it in real life, I must say that this appeals to 
> me greatly on paper:
> 
> http://www.aircraftspruce.com/catalog/pspages/active.php
> 
> This is one step past a 'detection wire' - its a 'fire extinguishing hose': 
> 
> From the web page:
> 
>> Active Extinguishing Line is totally independent fire extinguishing system 
>> from any power source. Its main secret lies in the heat detector in a form 
>> of a line made out of special laser predrilled polymer, which will react 
>> instantly to any source of heat or fire. This line (heat detector) is 
>> connected to reservoir containing fire-extinguishing agent: 
>> hexafluoropropane FE-36 or award winning Pyrocool FEF solution. Inside of 
>> the protected device (equipment) a loop made out of the heat detector 
>> breaks, creating a mini sprinkler, directly over source of fire or heat, 
>> extinguishing it instantly. In the moment of activation the system closed 
>> circuit switch collapses sending a signal informing of fire.
> 
> 
> 
> Aircraft Spruce have sold it for years, and I doubt they'd keep selling it if 
> it wasn't capable of doing what it promises. 
> 
> Regards,
>   Simon
> 
> On 10/01/2013, at 10:49 PM, James Dutschke <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> http://www.protectowire.com/products/protectowirelhd.htm
>> 
>> It's essentially 2 insulated wires that run around an engine bay and touch 
>> when the plastic between them melts. Shorting and indicating the fire. 
>> 
>> Sent from my iPhone
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