Jeremiah Anderson
Jeremiah Anderson
  • Видео 200
  • Просмотров 459 261
20240518JA5137
Sewerscope video inspection of the buried sewer lateral from the floor toilet flange plug in the unfinished basement. The sewer lateral was cast iron and then transitioned to clay tile at approximately 40-feet. The clay section had the beginning of tree root intrusions at regular intervals 8-feet apart where the coulplings connect. There were no solid accumulations and drainage was acceptable. I recommend tree root remval every 2 years as a prevenative maintenance measure.
Просмотров: 0

Видео

20240502JA5117
Просмотров 15314 дней назад
Sewerscope video inspection of buried sewer lateral from the clean out plug in the main sewer stack located in the utility room to the municipal connection. The material was PVC plastic the entire length. Drainage was acceptable and there were no solid accumulations or tree root intrusions. The sewer lateral was in acceptable condition. No further action is needed.
20240427JA5105
Просмотров 4221 день назад
Sewerscope video inspection of the buried sewer lateral from the clean out plug in the basement utility room at the main sewer stack. The sewer lateral was PVC plastic the entire length. There were no solid accumulations and no tree root inteusions. Flow was acceptable the entire length. No further action is necessary.
20240425JA5107
Просмотров 2721 день назад
Sewerscope video inspection of buried sewer lateral from the clean out plug on the floor of the basement to the municipal connection. The sewer lateral pipe was clay the entire length. There were no solid accumulatons visible. There were areas of pipe offsets visible that can cause solids to accumulate. There was heavy tree root intrusion visible near the municipal connection with approximately...
20240424JA5101
Просмотров 23121 день назад
Sewerscope video inspection of buried sewer lateral from the clean out plug in the basement utiilty room near the laundry tub. The sewer lateral was ABS plastic the entire length and was in acceptable condition. There were no solid or tree root intrusions and drainage was acceptable. No further action is necessary.
20240413JA5091
Просмотров 31Месяц назад
Sewerscope video inspection of buried sewer lateral from the basement clean out plug on the main sewer stack. There was a heavy accumulation of grease solids restricting flow approximately 20 feet from the clean out plug. The material was cast iron the entire length. The pipe was in acceptable condition. There were no tree root intrusions visible. I recommend clearing the grease out of the pipe...
20240328JA5070
Просмотров 12Месяц назад
Sewerscope video inspection of sewer lateral from the clean out plug access in the main plumbing stack in the basement. There were tree roots and solid accumulations visible immediately inside the sewer lateral. The camera could only pass approximately 20 feet inside the cast iron sewer lateral before becoming completely blocked. I recommend grinding and cutting away all tree root inrusions and...
20240328JA5071
Месяц назад
Chimscan video inspection of masonry chimney from the firebox. The overall condition of the chimney was acceptable. There was one area where masonry had eroded creating a gap between the clay flue tiles. This will result in a poor and reduced draft and allow products of combustion to escape the chimney.
20240321JA5062
Просмотров 2Месяц назад
Sewerscope video inspection of buried sewer lateral from the clean out plug in the main sewer stack located in the basement utility room. The pipe was black plastic ABS and transtioned into white plastic. There was a moderate accumulation of grease visible inside the pipe. This did not restrict drainage flow. There were no solid accumulations and no tree root intrusions. No further action is ne...
20240318JA5059
Просмотров 12 месяца назад
Chimscan video inspection of masonry fireplace chimney flue from the fireplace up and back down. There was one large gap at the first joint down from the crown where mortar was missing and eroded. This will allow heat and moisture to leak behind the bricks at the chimney crown and cause deterioration of the brick.
20240227JA5050
Просмотров 192 месяца назад
ChimScan video inspection of factory built fireplace and steel chimney liner assembly. There were no defects visible. The steel liner was in acceptable condition. There was a moderate collection of carbon soot on the interior of the steel surfaces. No further action is necessary.
20240217JA#25038
3 месяца назад
ChimScan video inspection of masonry chimney from the fireplace up to the top. The chimney was terracotta clay material. This chimney is sealed at the top. There were multiple areas of missing and eroded mortar between the joints creating open areas. These conditions will result in a poor overall draft. This fireplace cannot be used unless the top is unsealed. I recommend a steel liner is insta...
20240217JA#15038
Просмотров 13 месяца назад
ChimScan video inspection of masonry fireplace chimney from the fireplace up to the top. The chimney was terracotta clay and overall in acceptable condition. There was one area of missing and deteriorated mortar near the top joint. The chimney was very dirty near the fireplace throat area and the firebox was also dirty. Recommend clean the chimney.
20240214JA#25030
Просмотров 273 месяца назад
ChimScan video inspection of masonry fireplace chimney from the fireplace up. The entire length of this chimney has been relined with high temp masonry material. The chimney was in acceptable condition. There were no visible anomalies.
20240214JA#15030
Просмотров 443 месяца назад
Sewerscope video inspection of buried sewer lateral. Access from the clean out plug in the basemen floor drain to the municipal connection approximately 95-feet in length. The sewer lateral was in acceptable condition. There were no tree root intrusions visible. There were no solid accumulations obstructing drainage. The material was PVC and transitioned into cast iron. No pipe offsets were not...
20240202JA5018
Просмотров 93 месяца назад
20240202JA5018
20240201JA5019
Просмотров 1403 месяца назад
20240201JA5019
20240130JA5016
Просмотров 3063 месяца назад
20240130JA5016
20240129JA5013
Просмотров 1433 месяца назад
20240129JA5013
20240126JA5008
Просмотров 23 месяца назад
20240126JA5008
20240122JA5004
Просмотров 273 месяца назад
20240122JA5004
20240115HA4999
Просмотров 834 месяца назад
20240115HA4999
20240104JA4993
Просмотров 404 месяца назад
20240104JA4993
20231219JA4979
Просмотров 1554 месяца назад
20231219JA4979
20231206JA4969
Просмотров 535 месяцев назад
20231206JA4969
20231116JA4955
Просмотров 65 месяцев назад
20231116JA4955
20231124JA4957
Просмотров 35 месяцев назад
20231124JA4957
20231024JA4939
Просмотров 436 месяцев назад
20231024JA4939
20231102JA4946
Просмотров 446 месяцев назад
20231102JA4946
20231004JA4926
Просмотров 417 месяцев назад
20231004JA4926

Комментарии

  • @williardbillmore5713
    @williardbillmore5713 8 дней назад

    They heave with the frost

  • @Nick9drs
    @Nick9drs 22 дня назад

    Lame

  • @i_shih-tuznot8142
    @i_shih-tuznot8142 Месяц назад

    Nice where to buy these

  • @rivermcratt3683
    @rivermcratt3683 3 месяца назад

    Jesus christ, did the entire fire service forget about semi fog? If you fog it out, more water can touch more fire.

    • @steveraney2162
      @steveraney2162 2 месяца назад

      Have you ever been inside a structure fire? I don’t think so

  • @markpeterson-iv8rz
    @markpeterson-iv8rz 3 месяца назад

    Nice uninformed video. Great job

  • @stabssfmgineer1623
    @stabssfmgineer1623 4 месяца назад

    This is going to blow up so quickly now :D

  • @fyt54321
    @fyt54321 4 месяца назад

    lol @ri3m4nn "Fact: no one searched for this" ... Nor did I. It was on RUclips default for me. Probably 75 of my 350 channel subscriptions are construction, electrical, plumbing, carpentry, or other trades. The algorithm is often mysterious.

  • @ri3m4nn
    @ri3m4nn 4 месяца назад

    Fact: no one searched for this

    • @jbandersoninspection
      @jbandersoninspection 3 месяца назад

      I know, I know, I dont follow the rules for videos to be searchable. They serve a pupose and get sent out as links embedded into techincal reports for clients. So follow me for more videos on chimney scope and sewer scope inspections....

  • @donaldbaar9494
    @donaldbaar9494 8 месяцев назад

    Hello, Would it be acceptable if I used your video clip of the limestone basement walls ?

  • @user-ot4yb2jv7v
    @user-ot4yb2jv7v 8 месяцев назад

    😮😂

  • @CableWrestler
    @CableWrestler 9 месяцев назад

    Point of this is?

  • @BaldBozo
    @BaldBozo 9 месяцев назад

    Youre not going to show us whats down the 90? What a tease

    • @jbandersoninspection
      @jbandersoninspection 9 месяцев назад

      Ha...That's the big dark abyss aka municipal drain and we don't go there cuz its full of brown sharks.

  • @greglinski2208
    @greglinski2208 10 месяцев назад

    Excellent!

  • @pl6935
    @pl6935 11 месяцев назад

    Do you need clean out at the bottom of that vertical stack you are showing there?

  • @bristolharris4118
    @bristolharris4118 Год назад

    I could make a video about what I did but do not show what I did...waste of time!

  • @tamyraholt9948
    @tamyraholt9948 Год назад

    I am having issues with my cast iron floor drain. see the check ball is missing. I get rain water in the basement. Can I take the whole cast iron unit out and put a new one in????

    • @ThePomskysPalace
      @ThePomskysPalace 5 месяцев назад

      Is it a ground water issue? You may need a subpump. I have a hole in my basement that groundwater collects. If subpump isn’t working, it’ll back up into my basement. Ours is connected to the sewage line, it goes out into city sewage. However, I’ve been told that was against code and it’s supposed to flow out the side of your house.

  • @christellelemaire9749
    @christellelemaire9749 Год назад

    Coucou 🧡💚

  • @moegazzali7792
    @moegazzali7792 Год назад

    U created a s pipe from the elbow to the sanitary tee u suppose to keep at least 4 inches or greater pipe between

  • @Rotaris1
    @Rotaris1 Год назад

    All new "High Efficiency" shit is JUNK! More maintenance, more cost, acid exhaust in the ground and homes!!!! Try living with this garbage in real winters when its -40 for weeks.

  • @personanongratano1
    @personanongratano1 Год назад

    Why do you NEED to remove a clean out plug?? Mine is cast iron, all fused with rust and dirt, and hasn't been removed probably ever since it was put in, in 1960. I bought the house 3 years ago and can't wrap my head around it. So... why do you need to remove it???

    • @jbandersoninspection
      @jbandersoninspection Год назад

      The plug is removed so you can insert a cleaning machine into the branch drain line. These branch drain lines often collect lint from washing clothes and block drainage. You will notice this as water backing up from the floor drain while the clothes washer is discharging into the laundry tub

  • @amyhintz471
    @amyhintz471 Год назад

    What is this type of drain called? I have one and I don't understand why there's a reservoir to collect water drip off from the furnace and then just stay in that Reservoir around it for months and get all scummy and dirty which actually ends up plugging the drain hole and causing water to back up every so often. Once the height of the water reaches the drain theoretically it goes down there but the reservoir around it is lower than the drain so there's always an inch or so of standing water in it and I don't understand why it's like this or what to do about it or why it would have been made this way.

    • @dantheman9167
      @dantheman9167 Год назад

      Its the clean out

    • @dantheman9167
      @dantheman9167 Год назад

      That's for you to run your snake down if you have to run a snake down the drain cause you won't get it through the pee trap

  • @Og-Judy
    @Og-Judy Год назад

    Must be training cuz it looks like newbies

  • @jake_of_the_jungle9840
    @jake_of_the_jungle9840 Год назад

    That’s the cleanest old basement I’ve ever seen.

  • @frankdelucey2137
    @frankdelucey2137 Год назад

    If anyone was wondering what this is.. It’s a camera going up a chimney for inspection after it’s been cleaned.

  • @bushpearce
    @bushpearce Год назад

    I watched this from start to finish hoping I'd see a poop float past. 😐

    • @jbandersoninspection
      @jbandersoninspection Год назад

      🤣

    • @jbandersoninspection
      @jbandersoninspection Год назад

      That awkward moment when you hear a toilet flush upstairs while doing a sewer scope inspection

    • @bushpearce
      @bushpearce Год назад

      @@jbandersoninspection That would make amazing content. If that ever happens please upload it. I find toilet humour hilarious hahaha

  • @alexbellesia9676
    @alexbellesia9676 Год назад

    I’m in the process of tie in the washer box standpipe , other RUclips vids show at least 10 inches between p trap and waste line. Incident music lab suggested the way you have it, it will pull water out of the trap. I think he’s right.

  • @yuicel10
    @yuicel10 Год назад

    Plug size ?

  • @rjkoeller4444
    @rjkoeller4444 Год назад

    Full fog on the nozzle guys , you're not going to cool the room with a solid stream of water , basic fire school knowledge .

    • @nebraskaninkansas347
      @nebraskaninkansas347 Год назад

      Fog does not have the penetrating power of a solid stream. A fog would mostly steam and not reach the seat to diminish the energy being released.

    • @joker432
      @joker432 Год назад

      Uhhh you might want to go back to fire school. You never use fog on a room you are entering unless you want steam burns, that’s basic fire school knowledge. You are just talking out of your ass

    • @alfonsocastillo502
      @alfonsocastillo502 Год назад

      I'm curious what do you mean by full fog? why not solid stream?

    • @TheBladevortex
      @TheBladevortex Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/vkNFPWyidlc/видео.html

    • @WAzzzUUppp
      @WAzzzUUppp 3 месяца назад

      All fog is going to do is fill the room with steam and make the environment more difficult. If you was a firefighter maybe you should go back to training school

  • @deltrezamine
    @deltrezamine 2 года назад

    Idk why this was recommended to me lmao

  • @JackMordhJr
    @JackMordhJr 2 года назад

    What does the plug do?

    • @thegreatbenis225
      @thegreatbenis225 Год назад

      They are put in to piss me off

    • @jbandersoninspection
      @jbandersoninspection Год назад

      With the plug removed you bypass the water trap so it's a straight shot into the sewer drain pipe. The plug stops sewer gas from entering your home.

    • @thegreatbenis225
      @thegreatbenis225 Год назад

      @@jbandersoninspection No they just piss me off.

  • @scottyp1614
    @scottyp1614 2 года назад

    Smart Firefighting

  • @dangallo5370
    @dangallo5370 2 года назад

    For one that's not a flash over, it's a flare up.

  • @gamer_eliaz9519
    @gamer_eliaz9519 2 года назад

    1700 at the floor can you imagine that. Well played boys 💪💪

  • @Dav-oc2jp
    @Dav-oc2jp 2 года назад

    Love The Teamwork!

  • @scsteeldrums
    @scsteeldrums 2 года назад

    What make/model?

  • @michaelperkins739
    @michaelperkins739 2 года назад

    The subtle differences between Fully Involved and Flashover.

    • @timc5301
      @timc5301 Год назад

      Think of Flash over as the initiation of full envolvement

    • @bsfv2010
      @bsfv2010 Год назад

      @@timc5301 I mean a building can be fully involved without a flashover

    • @minutemanmedic4143
      @minutemanmedic4143 Год назад

      @@bsfv2010 no the definition of flashover is when the descending thermal plane hits the floor and everything in that room has reached its ignition temperature

    • @einflinkeswiesel2695
      @einflinkeswiesel2695 Год назад

      a flashover is the transition from an initial fire to a full grown fire

    • @CaleTheNail
      @CaleTheNail 2 месяца назад

      absolutely not@@einflinkeswiesel2695

  • @ahmaaaaad27
    @ahmaaaaad27 2 года назад

    nice explanation ...

  • @ernestgalvan9037
    @ernestgalvan9037 2 года назад

    Rollover… not Flashover…

  • @mikegrant8490
    @mikegrant8490 2 года назад

    Like most training fires, there are multiple times to get the nozzle to the seat of the fire(s). Surely there were points to be taught and learned by entry crews for chances at attacks from the unburned side as well as the burned side. Learning how to push a fire out of a structure by using good steam conversion practices instead of trying to drown it saves water and brings in cooler air from behind with the added benefit of saving property and more rapidly clearing smoke, aiding in search. Ventilation in a wide open training structure has already accomplished as been seen in this video and avails the crews the opportunity to try various scenarios. Training fires are where such techniques can be mastered in relative safety. I imagine the coordinated drills with vent teams and the hoseline crews were already done before this video??

    • @Namerer
      @Namerer 2 года назад

      You can not push fire. This is a myth from the 90’s that needs to die.

    • @mikegrant8490
      @mikegrant8490 2 года назад

      @@Namerer Well, I would have to guess physics and the laws of thermodynamics have all been changed since I retired 21 years ago. Good for you that you probably have to just look at the fire and 'wish it' away. I'm guessing that the fires today are hundreds of degrees cooler too, and you just throw, what, maybe a computer at them and poof... "They are hereby commanded to go out." Such wonderful things in the modern world! Is there still smoke and hot gases or have they too, been abolished? Gosh, and it's so nice to see that all those saves and good stops we made years ago with our antiquated techniques could have more easily turned into commercial parking lots and "buildable residential lots" .... our 'mythology', part of the ever changing and evolving fire science and fire engineering saved lives and prevented property loss. Your life in the continuum of the fire service is based on the general knowledge, APPLIED KNOWLEDGE, of generations. My grandfather was a career firefighter who was a LODD, line of duty death in 1934, who had none of the technology that I had and our generation was helping develop the tools and techniques that you use today. You stand on the shoulders of the men and women that served before you, don't forget. To say you cannot push fire? That's an absurdist statement. A well coordinated attack on the seat of the fire is demonstrably done everyday by well trained and led crews and pushing fire is simply moving the heat, smoke, gases and flame to where it can be cut away from its fuel source for extinguishment. If you have never seen or done it in its various forms , you need to find yourself with the nozzle and the willingness to learn how to do it In the right circumstance, that being a free burning state, past the incipient state, with some natural ventilation or with the coordinated venting happening and your own careful attention to the fire conditions that surround you and your application of the appropriate stream. There is a real feeling of accomplishment when you realize that you just made a great stop by capturing the dragon and pushing it out of an opening and saved the structure from the spread of a well involved fire by good steam conversion, so you see, pushing a fire is a real thing. (There are too, techniques to learn in shipboard and air crash and rescue firefighting in controlling fires by multiple teams directing streams to 'push fire' for confining or making paths for rescue... ) . Having done it several times and observed it done dozens of times, I know for a fact that it works. Everyone with even a few years experience knows it. I now have a new neighbor that has finished his fire training and now has a little less than a year on the job AND he's on the same department that I retired from. I can't wait to see if his rookie class believes or was taught that pushing fire is "a myth from the 90s that needs to die". Wanna further debate it? BRING IT ON... But, I will tell you that if your argument holds weight of fact based in science, then I will gladly change my mind to your way of thinking. No real career firefighter ever falls back on the ridiculous trope of '200 years of pride and firefighting tradition uninterrupted by progress' or that way of thinking. Be safe. Train like you fight.

    • @Namerer
      @Namerer 2 года назад

      @@mikegrant8490 im not reading all of that shit, long story short, you were given wrong information 21 years ago. Simple as that, the AIR flow from a fog nozzle can push AND pull fire but you can NOT push fire further into a building. It is not possible. You have been out of the game too long old man, you’re washed up. If you have any interest in correct information take time to look up how fire behavior works, theres a lot better information out there now.

    • @mikegrant8490
      @mikegrant8490 2 года назад

      @@Namerer Your failure to read and understand what I said is typical of someone who has a very real problem with their own inflated abilities. I feel sorry for the officer that has to command you and for your fellow teammates who must look at you as the one most likely to really screw up and get himself killed or get one of them killed. Maybe the fire service is really not something that you are cut out for. Did I say anything, ANYTHING, emphasis added, about pushing fire BACK INTO a structure? I DID say I retired 21 years ago, and I know things have evolved, not devolved. My abilities to handle a nozzle in an interior attack were more than adequate, well honed over 25 years of busy engine company service and as an instructor. Does your department mandate a two hour or more per shift training regimen? Is it enforced? If so, maybe you'll be adequate for the job with enough further training getting drilled into a thick, all knowing head encasing your made up mind. Again, be safe out there. Try to learn something new every day. Evolve or die. If you are the epitome of what the fire service is attracting, qualifying, training and retaining, then I guess the public is getting whatever their tax base can afford.

    • @Namerer
      @Namerer 2 года назад

      @@mikegrant8490 immagine being a fire fighter for 25 years and still thinking you can actually push fire. You failed all your students. The amount of air a fog nozzle pushes is not as much as the GPM’s the water puts out. You will put the water on the fire way faster then you can push air.

  • @metro33777
    @metro33777 3 года назад

    Not!

  • @colincostine9775
    @colincostine9775 3 года назад

    Jeremiah's own description tells you that it is not a flashover. Flashover is defined as near simultaneous ignition of heated fuel gases in the enclosure. Jeremiah tells us that the fire "is allowed to goe to full flashover" flashover is defined as near instantaneous! it is not something that you watch and record as it develops, ALLOWING it to happen. As I stated earlier, the slow steady build, which obviously started prior to the beginning of this clip, is predictable because, as Squad 61 points out, there is heavy billowing black smoke flow through the large openings from the beginning, as OPPOSED to the dark brown smoke from many small openings indicating a build-up of superheated gaseous fuel during the fire's "steady state" if it were actually prime for flashover. What we really have here is an excellent training burn where the person in charge allowed the fire to build to the point where the trainees may actually be able to feel some heat as they go in. Due to the obvious degree of ventilation dangerously high temperatures can't be reached. Putting two crews in one after another, while not standard practice at a "real fire", is very good practice at a training fire. Twenty to forty years ago live training burns were common and frequent and one could attend a half dozen a year if desired. With today's clean air laws it is very difficult to get them permitted, so it is necessary to get as much use out of them when they can happen. When I was conducting training burns we would very frequently put two and even three teams into the structure at the same time in order to maximize the benefit of the burn, and I would watch each burn carefully from beside the nozzle-man and have him shut down immediately upon knockdown so that the fire could quickly build up again. We could usually get every attendee into a burn as many times as they desired until they were thoroughly worn out, before pulling out and going defensive.

    • @jbandersoninspection
      @jbandersoninspection 3 года назад

      Very welll stated reply! I have 25-years of experience now in the fire service. Yes the instructor here was very good, and unfortunately he has passed away since this video was recorded by me. Thanks for commenting.

    • @kentcarter835
      @kentcarter835 2 года назад

      When does volume two of your post come out?

    • @notthatdonald1385
      @notthatdonald1385 2 года назад

      Agreed. Not flashover.

    • @minutemanmedic4143
      @minutemanmedic4143 Год назад

      Every single compartment fire will eventually reach flashover, that was at least Rollover, if not flashover

    • @Rescue-mt7fl
      @Rescue-mt7fl Год назад

      While you are correct that the initial piece was not a flashover but a well advanced fire state, the part I find of concern is the discussion of moving guys into training burns to feel heat. In this video you could see the immediate drop in fire conditions with application of water, but without continuing that attack and utilizing the reach of the stream, the crews moved rapidly into the flow path of the structure. The sudden “pop” of smoke as they move in is indicative of a compartment a bit further in reaching rapid ignition as the fire stream introduced air. All smoke is fuel and placing your personnel into that flow path of hot smoke is simply a matter of when a rapid fire event will push back into the crews. Our gear is NOT made to turn heat for fire attack. It is designed to prevent heat from getting to you in an emergency situation. When you feel heat through your gear you are already in danger. Any sudden increase in temperature at the point you feel heat will translate directly through your gear with zero ability of that gear to protect you any further. This is called the heat saturation point of your protective gear. This is the same thing as overheating your oven mits to the point you have to put the pan back on the stove, you couldn’t immediately go pick up another pan as the ability for the oven mitt to absorb heat is gone. With 65 feet of break over on a hand line, use the reach of the line, cool the overhead and environment and only push in as your TIC identifies cooling of the environment and decrease in fuel production. It takes no additional time, and often is actually faster, and certainly safer. The lessons NIST UL has taught us over the past decade are solid scientific facts of the way we should be fighting fire. Direct, exterior application of water is extremely aggressive and puts more water on the fire faster and safer.

  • @whiteybrundage5108
    @whiteybrundage5108 3 года назад

    Get in there and put it out

  • @trx_gaming6442
    @trx_gaming6442 3 года назад

    This guy is clickbait and hes a shit yoytuber

  • @colincostine9775
    @colincostine9775 3 года назад

    I didn't see any flashover there. Only predictable spread.

    • @Squad61
      @Squad61 3 года назад

      That depends of your definition of a Flashover, Backdraft, or smoke explosion. But they're all spreading the fire, so you are right.

    • @JasmineLindros
      @JasmineLindros 3 года назад

      Then you have a different definition of "flashover" than the training team that made this video.

    • @Squad61
      @Squad61 3 года назад

      @@JasmineLindros Well what you see here is a Flashover. Enough combustible materials, nice airflow with oxygen for the fire and openings to get the hot gasses flowing out. So when the temperature reaches the igninition point of the flammable gas you get your Flashover. Simpel. Close the door and you have an other ball game.

    • @Ace-wk2js
      @Ace-wk2js 3 года назад

      Yep thats a flashover

    • @martialvoirin4908
      @martialvoirin4908 3 года назад

      Bien devant le cône d expansion ! Et l attaque en jet bâton !!!! L approche et l attaque ne sont pas appropriées à ce type d embrassement surtout qu’à la lecture du feu on vois bien qu’un phénomène thermique ce réalise, c est comme ça que arrive les accidents !

  • @collinmankin4334
    @collinmankin4334 3 года назад

    Did I just see two attack line crews going in at the same time?

    • @PeterNichtlustig0815
      @PeterNichtlustig0815 3 года назад

      I´m asking myself: WTF are they even going in?

    • @RoofMonkey911
      @RoofMonkey911 3 года назад

      Says in description that it’s a training burn.

    • @donnie7013
      @donnie7013 3 года назад

      @@RoofMonkey911 Not training properly, second line should never go in unless first attack line goes down, or first team puts out the fire begins ventilation (via hydraulic procedures if vertical, or natural ventilation can't occur) and there is a rekindling of the fire. Even then, second line will never be the last one out of the building, or first one in.

    • @mike617
      @mike617 3 года назад

      @@donnie7013 not a ff here...why is that? (If I had to guess I’d say it’s because there is a chance one nozzle man could hit another in a no visibility situation?)

    • @Hunter-qu6hk
      @Hunter-qu6hk 3 года назад

      Been taking fire 1 classes for the past couple months, if the fire has spread far enough maybe two attack teams can enter a structure fire? I don’t know yet but maybe it’s an SOP thing.

  • @elenahart8847
    @elenahart8847 3 года назад

    Same dude

  • @codiserville593
    @codiserville593 3 года назад

    So is this non vented style allowed or is it supposed to be replaced?

    • @glorifiedtoastrwithlegs
      @glorifiedtoastrwithlegs 3 года назад

      It's not good for the plumbing system. The gurggle at the end you hear is air looking for a place to exit and with no vent the air has no place to go other than where it came from. Not a problem them but it causes the p-traps to empty in the process which empty p-traps means sewer smell. If you don't smell any sewer smell then it isn't an issue but it is not "right".

    • @justinwise3467
      @justinwise3467 3 года назад

      There needs to be a studor vent on top of the San Tee, just above the flood plain on the base of the sink. Easy fix. They did that Im assuming because the window.

  • @Motorrad41
    @Motorrad41 3 года назад

    Run into same problem today, 2015 ram 1500. My wife came to rescue me with 2 pliers. The designer of this a true idiot!!!

  • @capnbabiak
    @capnbabiak 4 года назад

    I had the same thing happen to my 2014 Ram. Really shitty design that is a 1 time use before proper storage is gone. Are we to have to weld on layers of washers and a nut to the under side of the truck to have functional storage? Can't leave the jack clanking around and the wingnut needs to secure to the truck. Good this we travel with some tools on us.

  • @philjungels7617
    @philjungels7617 5 лет назад

    Mine broke, even after a soak in PB Blaster! Now, I gotta get the stub out!