Fire & Evacuation VR training for mining in Delhi NCR.
Delhi NCR, Delhi NCR — auto, electronics and manufacturing belt (Manesar, Faridabad and Noida clusters). Practise extinguisher selection, fire-spread behaviour and coordinated evacuation in a true-to-life plant fire, without lighting one.
Fire & Evacuation VR training for mining in Delhi NCR
DrillXR Fire and Evacuation puts a trainee inside a true-to-life plant fire so they can act, not just watch. The simulation reproduces Class A, B and C ignition and spread, the smoke that strips away visibility, the egress routes that get blocked when a fire takes hold, and the panic and crowd flow that turn an orderly evacuation into a crush. Inside the headset the learner raises the alarm, sizes up the fire, selects the correct extinguisher for the fuel involved, applies the P.A.S.S. technique under time pressure, moves to the designated safe route and accounts for personnel at the assembly point. Every one of those decisions carries a consequence the trainee can see and feel.
The stakes are heavy and statutory. The Factories Act 1948 obliges occupiers to provide adequate means of escape and fire-fighting provision, the National Building Code of India Part 4 sets the fire and life-safety framework for the premises themselves, and BIS IS 2190 governs which extinguisher belongs against which class of fire. Classroom slides and a once-a-year wet drill rarely build the muscle memory that decides whether someone reaches for water on an electrical fire or freezes when the corridor fills with smoke. DrillXR lets a workforce rehearse the full chain of response, repeatedly and assessably, without ever lighting a fire on site.
Fire & Evacuation training for Delhi NCR’s industrial base
Delhi NCR is North India's largest manufacturing engine, built around three powerful sub-clusters: Manesar in Haryana, with its automotive OEMs and tier-one supplier base; Faridabad, a long-established heavy-engineering, machinery and auto-component belt; and Noida, with its electronics, appliance and light-manufacturing concentration. Together they form a sprawling, multi-state industrial region where car and two-wheeler assembly, forging and machining, electronics production and large-scale warehousing operate side by side. The workforce is enormous, heavily contract and migrant, and rotates frequently — making consistent safety competence a region-wide challenge rather than a single-plant one.
The scale and churn of NCR's workforce make training consistency the core problem: a Manesar supplier or a Faridabad engineering unit is constantly inducting new, often contract, operators, and a slide-and-signature induction guarantees neither competence nor evidence of it. VR fixes both. A new operator can rehearse a forklift pedestrian near-miss, a press lockout or a line-side evacuation in the headset until the response is reflexive, and the plant captures a score for every attempt regardless of who the worker is or when they started. For OEM-audited suppliers around Manesar and for multi-site operators spread across Haryana, Delhi and Noida, that assessed, repeatable record lets them hold a vast and mobile workforce to one measurable safety standard — and prove it to whichever state regulator and customer comes calling.
Inside a fire & evacuation drill
A session opens on the shop floor as a fault sparks a small Class B fuel fire near a process line. The trainee first raises the alarm at the nearest call point, establishing that life safety and notification come before any attempt to fight the fire. They then assess size and fuel type and select an extinguisher from the station; choose a water unit on the flammable liquid and the fire spreads. With the correct agent in hand they apply P.A.S.S., aiming at the base and sweeping until knockdown. As smoke banks down and one corridor fills, the headset presents a route choice and the learner evacuates by the safe egress to the assembly point, where they complete a head count. Hesitation, a wrong agent or a missed head count all register against the score.
Mining risk in focus
Mining's failure modes are dominated by atmosphere and movement. Confined-space and gas hazards — oxygen deficiency, methane or other toxic accumulations in headings, bunkers and sumps — kill quickly and often claim would-be rescuers too. Heavy-vehicle interaction on surface operations, where dumpers and shovels share ground with light vehicles and people in poor visibility, is a persistent cause of fatalities. Rockfall and ground failure remain ever-present underground, and when an incident does escalate, a disorganised or delayed emergency egress is what turns a survivable event into a multiple-fatality disaster. Each of these is a coordination and procedure problem that a written exam cannot validate.
Go deeper on the Fire & Evacuation module, VR training for mining, or all training in Delhi NCR.
The hazards drilled
- Class A/B/C fire ignition & spread
- smoke spread and visibility loss
- blocked egress routes
- panic and crowd flow
Mining risks in Delhi NCR
- confined space & gas hazards
- heavy-vehicle interaction
- rockfall
- emergency egress
The scored procedure
- 01Raise the alarm
- 02Select the correct extinguisher
- 03Apply P.A.S.S. technique
- 04Evacuate via the safe route
- 05Account for personnel at the assembly point
Compliance mapping
Related drills for mining
Explore the Fire & Evacuation module, VR training for mining, or all training in Delhi NCR.
Fire & Evacuation VR training in Delhi NCR — FAQs
Why run fire & evacuation VR training for mining in Delhi NCR?
Delhi NCR is auto, electronics and manufacturing belt (Manesar, Faridabad and Noida clusters). Mining teams there face confined space & gas hazards, heavy-vehicle interaction, rockfall. DrillXR lets crews rehearse fire & evacuation safely and repeatably, with scored, audit-ready evidence.
What does the Fire & Evacuation simulation cover?
Practise extinguisher selection, fire-spread behaviour and coordinated evacuation in a true-to-life plant fire, without lighting one. It reproduces Class A/B/C fire ignition & spread, smoke spread and visibility loss, blocked egress routes.
Which regulations apply?
Factories Act 1948 (fire safety & means of escape); National Building Code of India (Part 4 Fire & Life Safety); BIS IS 2190 (fire extinguisher selection); Mines Act 1952; DGMS circulars; Mines Rules / Vocational Training Rules.
Fire & Evacuation drills for mining in Delhi NCR.
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