Flame spread route in fire strongly depends on distribution of combustible materials. Two types of scenario are considered in flame spread when combustible materials randomly distributed; one case is that flame spreads and combustible materials burn out, and the other case is that flame self-extinguishes on the way. The threshold of burning out or self-extinguishing may be determined by quantity of combustible materials and their placement in space. Our objectives are to clarify the characteristics and threshold of flame spread. In this paper, we examine non-uniform flame spread in open air along a thin combustible solid with randomly distributed pores, which are considered as noncombustible space. Experimental results show that the flame spread rate for S <= 1 (S equivalent to d/L-h, S: scale ratio, d: pore-scale, L-h: pre-heat length ahead of flame leading edge measured by using a shadowgraph method) increases with increasing the porosity and reaches maximum value approximately at 20-30% of porosity, while the flame spread rate for S > 1 is almost constant. Over 40% of porosity, the flame spread rate for both S <= 1 and S > 1 decreases. The flame cannot spread and completely self-extinguish over 60% of porosity independently with pore-scale and shape. The threshold of flame spread is related with the average-number of slit, N-s, which is made by connecting each pores. The N-s as the threshold of flame spread is unity for S > 1, while the modified average-number of slit (N-s x S) becomes two for S <= 1. (C) 2010 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.