15313 - San Francisco, CA - Commander Super Pumper EXT

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  • Опубликовано: 1 фев 2023
  • Need to move a lot of water...and we mean A LOT of water quick? Introducing the Rosenbauer Super Pumper built for San Francisco Fire Department to help move large amounts of water where not available. The Rosenbauer N200 pump is certified to 5750 GPM and is built from carbon fiber for excellent resistance to corrosion and impacts. This truck also has the 3000 GPM carbon fiber submersible pump, which is hydraulically driven, to assist in situations where the truck may not be positioned close to the water source. Finally, it's packed full with a compliment of 6000 ft. of 5" LDH, 500 ft. of 3", 200 ft. of 8" hose. Follow along with Rosenbauer Chief Engineer Chris Kleinhuizen to get the full details on this build!
    www.rosenbaueramerica.com

Комментарии • 66

  • @viperq
    @viperq Год назад +14

    I think this will be SFFD's 1st Rosenbauer.

  • @406fire9
    @406fire9 Год назад +5

    Absolutely love, and love the code 3 TA and siren setup, my dream truck right there.

    • @thunderbear0
      @thunderbear0 11 месяцев назад

      True. Code 3 has the best sirens

    • @406fire9
      @406fire9 11 месяцев назад

      @@thunderbear0 amen!

  • @leehart9055
    @leehart9055 Год назад +2

    WOW what a truck. I would like to see this truck in action.

    • @dbyers3897
      @dbyers3897 Год назад +1

      NO, you do not. Testing & training only, please. Hopefully they will collect dust.

  • @samcaban7229
    @samcaban7229 Год назад +6

    Very surprised they went with Rosenbaur since recently SFFD was purchasing Ferrara engines,and Ferrara has a Super Pumper model perhaps it didn't meet SFFD spec's?

    • @qreviewswquiantehoggard5396
      @qreviewswquiantehoggard5396 Год назад +1

      Don’t think so, looking comparatively to the Ferrara one. This is more powerful and a little more experimental to what it seems is being looked for, especially when considering our AUX water system

    • @dbyers3897
      @dbyers3897 Год назад +4

      Aaah, cost? Open bidding means Rosie underbid Ferrara.

  • @peterarvanitis6497
    @peterarvanitis6497 Год назад +1

    That’s a lot of water flow there

  • @HighwayLand
    @HighwayLand Год назад +4

    3:31 SF plans on having 30 of these?!?!?! Where do they plan on keeping all these rigs? And I am sure the city does realize that most of the roads for that BIG ONE will be damaged or destroyed, so good luck on getting all 30 of these rigs to the location where you need them. Nothing against SF by the way, I think it's great that they are getting prepared for the inevitable, but nobody is every truly prepared.

    • @tfefire
      @tfefire Год назад +4

      The press release from July 14, 2021 says "an initial order of three" so either he *really* misspoke or the contract has options for up to 30. The contract runs through 2024 or extend to 2028 so they'd need to get busy building these things if that was the case. Even then I doubt SF is getting more than 5 for themselves. The others would go to surrounding cities/county. Way too much for specialty vehicles if SF was keeping all of them.

    • @qreviewswquiantehoggard5396
      @qreviewswquiantehoggard5396 Год назад +2

      @@tfefire yeah there’s currently 4 portal hose tenders in SF, so the idea of 30 especially with where certain stations are located is kinda wild haha

  • @dbyers3897
    @dbyers3897 Год назад +1

    It's a high-capacity pumper, not a hose tender.

  • @MaxsFireVideography
    @MaxsFireVideography Год назад +1

    What station is this truck gonna be housed when it goes into service

  • @miguel-andrewjimenez9499
    @miguel-andrewjimenez9499 Год назад

    When will this truck enter service?

  • @owensweetland342
    @owensweetland342 Год назад +2

    Seems like the West Coast is switching to Rosenbauer. The company offers tha just this familiar grill face.

    • @qreviewswquiantehoggard5396
      @qreviewswquiantehoggard5396 Год назад +2

      SF just revived a ton of new ferrera equipment, however these seems more powerful than the super pumpers that ferrera makes

    • @dbyers3897
      @dbyers3897 Год назад

      @@qreviewswquiantehoggard5396 But did they live? IE, "revived"

  • @NeilM01989
    @NeilM01989 Год назад

    Nice video, liked and shared 🧑🏻👍🏻🚒

  • @jessnunez7556
    @jessnunez7556 Год назад

    Wow I’ve never seen so many discharges

    • @Uisci81
      @Uisci81 Год назад +4

      Our newest Fireboat for SF has 10 5” outlets and it can offload 20,000 GPM

    • @jessnunez7556
      @jessnunez7556 Год назад

      @@Uisci81 wow I would love to see that in action.

  • @geraldfichtner1915
    @geraldfichtner1915 5 месяцев назад

    Fantastic did he say they will have 30 of these Units ? how much for this special unit ? TIA : GF : Boston

  • @georgecoons6872
    @georgecoons6872 Год назад +3

    They got this idea from New York city. 4 for each burough.

    • @SuperNytube
      @SuperNytube Год назад

      Where can I find more info on the New York plan ?

    • @tfefire
      @tfefire Год назад

      @@SuperNytube Search for "Super Pumper System". Not quite as George described.

    • @qreviewswquiantehoggard5396
      @qreviewswquiantehoggard5396 Год назад +3

      We already had hose tenders here we just never have to really use them, there’s 4-5 in SF currently they’re a lot older though

    • @qreviewswquiantehoggard5396
      @qreviewswquiantehoggard5396 Год назад

      @@SuperNytube type in Ferrera Super Pumper FDNY

    • @MB12116
      @MB12116 Год назад +1

      @@qreviewswquiantehoggard5396 the super pumper didn’t include the hose. This a a genius setup by sffd. It was tested in the 1989 earthquake, and they used a fireboat for water supply.

  • @MrJLee-ri3so
    @MrJLee-ri3so Год назад +2

    They bought Ferreri engines before, shorter engines so they can navigate the narrow streets .

    • @chazman4461
      @chazman4461 Год назад +2

      This is a specialty unit. So my guess is those were not desired requirements as it is strictly water supply.

    • @qreviewswquiantehoggard5396
      @qreviewswquiantehoggard5396 Год назад

      Ferrera does make super pumpers as well, this one seems more powerful

    • @dbyers3897
      @dbyers3897 Год назад

      SF streets are not narrow except for a few in the oldest parts. Maneuverability through traffic is the primary reason for shorter wheelbases. These tenders will not be line units so will seldom need to negotiate heavy traffic.

    • @dbyers3897
      @dbyers3897 Месяц назад

      @@qreviewswquiantehoggard5396 It may seem it since Rosie likes to build monstrous apparatus but it isn't any more powerful than Chris Ferrara's.

  • @williamheber2118
    @williamheber2118 Год назад

    What is the manpower for this unit? How long for setup? How do they retrieve suction hose from above? How much manpower for the setup?

    • @chazman4461
      @chazman4461 Год назад

      My guess would be an engine company is dispatched with it to assist. A lot of larger departments employ auxiliary personnel 24/7 also so they may have that option. Just my guess what I have seen other places.

    • @ryanrodriguez8918
      @ryanrodriguez8918 Год назад +2

      ​@@chazman4461 they will most likely cross-staff these units as they are not your everyday driver. Just like some stations have USAR and HAZMAT units...those are all cross-staffed by FF's with specialties on each specific apparatus...

    • @Uisci81
      @Uisci81 Год назад +8

      I work at a station with a Hose Tender in SF, if the HT is needed, two firefighters, we run 4 man crews jump on the HT and both Engine and HT respond to the incident and we become the manpower for the HT (deployment/operation) etc.

    • @rp1645
      @rp1645 Год назад +3

      @@Uisci81
      Also did not the NEW fireboat be able to work with these engines in case the secondary water system is put out of service. Say another big Earthquake.

    • @qreviewswquiantehoggard5396
      @qreviewswquiantehoggard5396 Год назад

      @@rp1645 in theory if needed can connect to the fire boats, happened during the 89 earthquake as well

  • @solarissv777
    @solarissv777 Год назад +2

    I wonder why they chose this instead of containerized solution?

    • @ryanrodriguez8918
      @ryanrodriguez8918 Год назад

      Picking up and moving a container is too time consuming...unlike these you can just drive to where you need to go if you need to relocate your apparatus...

    • @solarissv777
      @solarissv777 Год назад +1

      @@ryanrodriguez8918 yes, but you are not tied to a single vehicle, you can put that container on any suitable commercial carrier, that even if equipped with a hydraulic hookloader may actually cost less then a firetruck Custom chassis. Also for containerized solutions you can use multimodule ones, where the actual pump slides from the platform, while the hose bed stays on, so the truck can continue laying 8 inch line, to the actual fire, while the firefighters besides the pump are working on actual deployment of the pump.

    • @CPR12345
      @CPR12345 Год назад

      Hey Victor L, you should let the adults play. You don’t know what you’re talking about…so you can sit at the kids table and learn something. 😬🤷🏻‍♂️🤪🙄🤦🏻‍♂️🤣

    • @solarissv777
      @solarissv777 Год назад +1

      @@CPR12345 I'm talking about this thing ruclips.net/video/6_gEntQEseM/видео.html they are used all over the Europe, and as far as I recall FDNY bought some.
      But who am I to tell you how to spend the money? If you want copious amounts of chrome and custom chassis that cost at least twice as much as their commercial counterparts feel free to do whatever you want. After all it is the most American thing to have some fire departments with 30 year old vehicles that are held by ductape and prayers, and others that spend money on gold-plated letters on their trucks.

    • @owensweetland342
      @owensweetland342 Год назад +1

      $$

  • @Lucyblacklab
    @Lucyblacklab Год назад

    I wonder how much that bad boy was

    • @blainenodes8182
      @blainenodes8182 Год назад

      W/add on equipment,must be 900.000.oo$+ just a ???in 2023 u can still get an engine

    • @davidweston6653
      @davidweston6653 Год назад +2

      Average pumpers w/o frills are often 1mil. This critter will be way above that
      🚒💨

    • @dbyers3897
      @dbyers3897 Месяц назад

      @@davidweston6653 Trucks avg $1m but engines are $300,000 to $600,000 depending on the specs & number in the contract. My estimate for this apparatus is roughly $5m. It's a monstrous one-of-a-kind.

  • @jromebizzle
    @jromebizzle 8 месяцев назад

    Has anyone seen this engine on a fire?

    • @dbyers3897
      @dbyers3897 Месяц назад

      Not an engine so could not & would not normally operate at a fire. Please register to the video. Take notes.

  • @littlehuey5679
    @littlehuey5679 Год назад

    Who else besides SF has one ?

    • @dbyers3897
      @dbyers3897 Месяц назад

      No one else would waste money on something like this. San Francisco has a particular need so they had a specialty pumper built.

  • @mitchhoward9181
    @mitchhoward9181 17 дней назад

    Seems like a waste of money for 30 of them. It would be better to just upgrade or extend the hydrant system.

  • @bobdambra4421
    @bobdambra4421 11 месяцев назад

    More crap! This is more selling/buying of things you really don't use or rarely need. Money is better spent on the more manpower and standard engines. San Francisco does not have a water problem or a pumping problem it has a priority problem! These toys do nothing to increase manpower or attac capabilities at a fire. Someone decided they want a bigger toy then their neighbor. How many men could these over sized, over weight, and over priced toys been replaced with where you need it most... This is a real circus...

  • @nightwolf883
    @nightwolf883 Год назад

    Is that a rotator lightbar on the roof?

  • @lesterawalt3184
    @lesterawalt3184 Год назад +1

    I call bs on the 6800 gpm. Some basic math says that is not going to happen

    • @lakshkarkera4661
      @lakshkarkera4661 Год назад

      WHY

    • @ryanrodriguez8918
      @ryanrodriguez8918 Год назад +5

      That is why they pay the engineers who designed this the big bucks, and not us!

    • @chazman4461
      @chazman4461 Год назад +4

      Every pumper sold by all manufacturers go through a UL test. It has to pass that test to get rated. Most large departments also test to make sure it gets to the rating desired. Or people do not get paid.

    • @lenphil9875
      @lenphil9875 Год назад +3

      You can call what you like. If you haven't tested it yourself, your call is BS.

    • @LAFD54
      @LAFD54 7 месяцев назад

      LOL! What basic math did you use and where did you obtain your fire protection engineering degree from?