Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register. Please log in or create an account.
Public: Disaster: Flood
Flood protection   (+19)  [vote for, against]
A product further developed

Many people in flood-prone areas, no doubt, already use a lot of those widely advertised air-evacuated plastic bags to store their soft-goods in, especially when a flood is predicted.

Taking the principle a step further, I visualise bags intended to protect large items such as furniture, even machinery, from floods. ["Mothballing" differs. I'm thinking of a re-useable consumer product. A search revealed nothing similar.]

I see two kinds of bag : ONE, being pre-flood bags issued by insurance companies and civil authorities probably with a manual suction pump available on request. They would be fitted to, say, a chest of drawers full of clothing, like this :

1. Fit into the large bag supplied, a corrugated board "floor", the shape of the chest's footprint. 2. Roll the open bag down to this floor. 3. Two people lift the chest. Third person puts the rolled down bag in place and starts the upward unrolling. 4. Seal top and suck out air.

I think a solo person with practice could fit a bag by tilting and kicking the bag-floor into place. A good aspect of the scheme is that size-match of bag and object isn't critical; with shrinkwrap. All the flappy bits get sucked flat. One large size might fit all ordinary furniture etc., keeping costs down.

TWO : "Flood-furniture" with flood-bags built-in to the base, invisible like air-bags in cars. Comes the flood warning, you flip down the concealing panels, pull up the bag, seal, and deflate it.

Named FloodBags, the product could have other than flood uses, such as in boats, and for non-water uses such as shrink-wrapping the entire contents of a seldom used mountain hut.
-- rayfo, Nov 06 2000

Flood bag for cars http://totallyabsurd.com/floodbag.htm
Semi-baked in car form. [mmmrorschach, Jun 01 2007]

I seem to remember reading somewhere once that the Israeli army keep their tanks stored in giant zip-up plastic bags. No really: it stops sand drifting into the machinery and causing embarassing equipment breakdown just when a trouble free quick start is called for. So it should certainly be possible to extend the idea to furniture and domestic appliances. It's a fine idea, and I applaud you on it.
-- Skinny Rob, Nov 06 2000


I really like the sentence "All the flappy bits get sucked flat." It should be more widely used.

These would be useful for off-season storage of many things, even without disasters; adding some camphor and a dessicant, perhaps.
-- hello_c, Nov 07 2000


Why is it important to evacuate the bags? I could see that helping to preserve foods, but I don't see why you'd bother with furniture.
-- egnor, Nov 07 2000


[a] to reduce thr tendency of items to float away in extreme floods [b] to reduce number of mould etc spores trapped in air as in the case of food-packaging [c] to reduce thr moisture they need [d] to make "one size fits all" a more likely proposition, to simplify emergency procedures.
-- rayfo, Nov 07 2000


Somewhere, I saw a thing for water-activated dams. You bury them around your house, and when a flood starts, water flows into the bottom of the housing, raising the clad-styrofoam dams. They interlock together, and stop the water. Unfortunately, I can't remember where...
-- StarChaser, Nov 09 2000


Can we give Rayfro a Gideon Award? Ever seen tears on a flood-victims face? Evacuating air is important for all reasons indicated. Necessity is the mother of all invention.
-- thumbwax, Nov 10 2000


This really is a fine idea. I voted for it. Do you suppose that a company that invested in creating such FloodBags would see a return on their investment? Is it economically viable?

I too adore "all the flappy bits get sucked flat."
-- bristolz, Nov 10 2000


Hooray for flappy bits getting the sucking down that they deserve.

Some things that you might add could be; handles for carrying or tying down; address labels for location if they drift off etc

Also they could be inflated and secured in doorways to prevent water ever getting to the furniture. This would also mean that there would be no need for bulky, heavy, hard to transport sandbags. But starchasers' thingy sounds better because it stops the water from even entering your property and spoiling your garden, car or shed
-- chud, Nov 11 2000


Would've come in handy about now down south.
-- RayfordSteele, Sep 08 2005


Why isn't this happening already? I would guess insurance companies would offer them theirselves.
-- twitch, May 31 2007


Generally, I like this idea.

However, the "floating away" issue is real; if you evacuate the bags, this means that any leak is going to result in water getting in, whereas a slight OVERpressure would prevent it; you could prevent mould problems etc more effectively by filling the bags with nitrogen rather than air.

Of course, overpressure would also make the stuff even more inclined to float about - most things would do this pretty badly even with underpressure. Taking inflated bags off again would be difficult to do without just cutting the bags, too - one can imagine the room being completely filled with bags.

Which suggests another idea: why NOT fill every room with inflated bags, and keep the water out completely? Or shrink wrap the whole house?
-- Cosh i Pi, Jun 01 2007


House-In-A-Bag?
-- theleopard, Jun 01 2007


Or run refrigeration coils around the house, and freeze the rising water into an impenetrable ice-dam.
-- MaxwellBuchanan, Jun 01 2007


//why NOT fill every room with inflated bags//

..Because it would be tradgedy multiplied, when the buoyancy from the room full of inflated bags pushes the roof off the house with only a foot of water.
-- Custardguts, May 24 2012


The list of annotators here is a Who's Who of the early days of the HB. [rayfo] was an old, frail man when I first arrived. He must surely have passed by now.
-- UnaBubba, May 24 2012


House on one end of a lever, the other end a weighted container in a sealed-ish chamber. Flood comes along, fills container via a pipe, container sinks, house rises. Flood recedes, open tap on side of container.

Chamber has to be water-proof with a top vent that is dog/drunk proof to stop them taking a leak into the container and the house mysteriously rising over a period of time.
-- not_morrison_rm, May 24 2012



random, halfbakery