What to do with a fire axe on a submarine? (Don’t need help fast; I have an axe.)

There’s a thread in the Café about the movie Total Recall. I mentioned one of the scenes in the movie that always bothered me. Near the end of the movie, during a fight that takes place on Mars, someone grabs a fire axe off the wall and goes after Arnold. See the segment here.

I’ve always been baffled by this. A fire axe? On Mars? In a building mostly made of metal and with windows you really don’t want to break? Never made sense to me.

Then Strassia says that it’s really not all that absurd:

I still don’t get it. If a piece of electronic equipment is on fire, you’re trained to hack at it with an axe? That’s effective? To chop through metal bulkheads? Chop up flammable bolts of cloth? Zombie shipmates? Jack Torrance impressions? I’m still having a hard time wrapping my head around this, so figured I’d throw it out to GQ and ask for some details.

What to do with a fire axe on a submarine?

Axes are rescue and forcible entry tools, great for breaking windows, doors, and generally breaking shit that is in your way. They may be of limited use on a sub, but they are still a big freakin hammer with a sharp edge you could use to sever a pipe or cabling bundle if need be.

There are enclosed spaces on a submarine and the fire may be behind a barrier. One of the best tools to gain entry would be a fire ax. You can pry open cabinets, hack through locked doors, etc. There are still plenty of uses for it.

There was a great cartoon in the hardback edition of the RPG “Traveller”. It showed a window on a spaceship (stars and planets visible outside) and there’s a hammer hanging next to the window with a sign reading “In case of fire, break glass”.

When I did my live disaster training years ago we were introduced to fire axes - as others have said, you can use them to get past barriers, pry things open, lever debris up off someone pinned underneath and so on. It’s a multipurpose tool and can be handy in many disasters that don’t even involve flames.

Well, you hack through the power cord with the axe (safely, because the handle is non-conductive wood). That converts it from an electrical fire to a much more easily extinguished regular fire.

Fire axes can also be used to drag burning or heated materials out of the way if the main part of a fire is inaccessible to be extinguished.

There were no fire axes on the submarine I was on. (80’s)

You secure power to burning electrical equipment by turning off the appropriate breaker or switch.

They carry fire axes on airplanes…

From here

We had them in my computer shop. (CV sailor, in the 80’s.)

You may not be able to get to the breaker. You may not be familiar enough with the equipment to know which/where the breaker is. But the fireax is available as an option, and having more options is always a good thing.

Also, if we had to abandon ship, we were also expected to destroy Classified equipment (if time permitted). The fireax and the sledgehammer were tools for this purpose.

This makes sense: the best way to put out a fire would be to remove the oxygen from the room.

On a sinking ship an axe would be useful if someone was handcuffed to a pipe in the purser’s office, and the key couldn’t be found.

I wasn’t going to go here, I decided against it, but after the quoted, I feel fine to do so:

You could ask Jack Bauer

Season Opener for Season 8 IIRC. Jack escorts someone up multiple flights of stairs. Jack takes a turn off on one of the interim floors, after seeing an axe he goes into hiding.

Double spoilered just in case :

The antagonists follow up the stairs in chase, Jack rotates into the stairwell right at that moment, and plunges the Axe square into the guy’s chest.