Excellent video content! Apologies for butting in, I would love your opinion. Have you thought about - Rozardner Lucky Interview Reality (do a search on google)? It is a smashing one off guide for firefighter interview tips without the normal expense. Ive heard some extraordinary things about it and my friend got amazing results with it.
Excellent training video! Dragging a ladder seems like a good way to destroy it, but it's better to destroy a ladder than to arrive at a rescue 5 seconds too late. A ladder mover might be the answer to the question that no one asked.
Hey just wanted to say this was very helpful currently a recruit for a volunteer department starting the fire academy this in august learning how to throw ladders and the parts of a ladder now with my crew so thats one less thing I have to worry about in the academy but thank you for sharing this video
Hi Matt. Great video, I am a vol Firefighter in the Dominican Republic and we really do not use ladders here, I have been trying to get them to understand how important it is, especially when a firefighter is in trouble, I can say that we do have one, but the chief is always lending it out to construction company's, the ladder was donated by Florida Fire, and it was new, now it is a mess with paint all over it, and most of the time, the rope is broke. There will be a day when they will really need it. And it just may be too late. I am doing what I can, but it is a different world, there ethics are very different, even in the hiring of firefighters, we have 3 new recruits, 18 and 19 years old, they have not been trained, they have been working for about 5 months, no programs, nothing. I have been butting heads with the chief about this for over 2 years, and still nothing, I guess they are waiting for something to happen before making any changes, its prevention, they have no clue, I am doing my best, but do not know how much longer I can continue like this, I cant take them by their hand when we have a fire, I have my own job todo, as they do not know what theirs is, a real shame. Thanks for your service, be safe.
"the chief is always lending it out to construction company's, the ladder was donated by Florida Fire, and it was new, now it is a mess with paint all over it, and most of the time, the rope is broke." WTF...this is how you kill someone
Great video with some alternative methods. Most of our houses in my district have long driveways that make laddering the roof with an aerial quite the challenge. So ground ladders are our "go to" most of the time. If I have a surface that the butt of the ladder can bite into, I like to transition the ladder flat on to my shoulder from the high carry. After this I advance towards the structure and thrust the ladder into the ground gaining enough momentum to raise the ladder in one motion. It is a bear with the 24 or 28, but it is nice and quick with one person. Don't know if you have seen that before, but just an idea! Stay safe!
No, Thank you... I tried doing that at the Academy at they said no..lol I guess they one us to do everything by the book for now.. But soon as i make it, Im doing it your way. heheh
way more informative than all the 2 hour long bs OSHA videos. can tell this guy expertly works with ladders everyday and isn't some safety dork who does nothing but sit behind a desk.
Learned some really neat tricks, great video brother. My one complaint is I’ll be damned if my chief ever catches me dragging a ladder! Otherwise awesome video!
Thank you very much Luis Serrano. Make sure you check out our website www.boxalarmtraining.com and subscribe to our channel. We are working on several more videos right now.
Cant wait to try all this with a regular extension ladder. I attempted nearly all of it after watching this and getting all psyched with the 40 footer and was reminded what a 98lb. Weakling I am. Didnt kill anybody, but after just barely getting it raised once, I couldn't move it at all and was nearly spent. When I lowered it, i got it like 70 percent down before the ladder started extending in my hands (should have spun it around first, I think) and I had to let it crash the final five or six feet. Later I got the tip of my shoe stuck in between the rungs and luckily my toes were spared and I kept control of the ladder or my foot was going with it. Abandoned the power clean as soon as I assumed the grip. Once I got it raised (and barely kept it pinned to the building ad it wanted to tip), it was evident it was not on flat ground so I had to try to lift up one leg while sliding something underneath while not allowing it to slide down the entire side of the house. Somehow, it worked. I dont think I could even carry the ladder vertically with the low hand through, weak hand over method that is the go-to on a 20 footer. I have no doubt this all would've been awesome with a manageable ladder, but god damn lol. Rough day.
Captain, unfortunately I failed my state test because I did not fully extend the ladder .. I was rung short. There was no command to fully extend. Why do you think they wanted me to fully extend a ladder being their was no assignment or task when raising it? In my book it says nothing about a ladder having to be fully extended. I tied it off perfectly, had the fly out and made contact the entire time.
Sorry to hear that. No idea how the testing process is performed in your area. We raise and extend ladders to reach a location so I’m not sure what the testing criteria was for your test.
I am curious too. It could be specific to the test and not a standard or recommended practice. Perhaps the intention is to “know your ladder’s maximum reach relative to structure visual cues and then draw down to a target area?” It sounds like wasted time but presumably not to be employeed with immediate rescue needs so nominal amount of time to raise to maximum and know limitations of what you have deployed and you can begin planning alternatives if the need arises beyond existing ladder limits...or know you could safely get to a higher point with the existing ladder.
To be honest I think this ladder is heavier than your 375lb rated. This is a 24’ AlcoLite rated at 750lbs. It weighs 75lbs. I think most of the fiberglass ladders weigh a good bit less than fire service ladders. Fire service ladders have to meet NFPA1931 and they are way over engineered.
@@Boxalarmtraining So they're about the same weight. Didn't know they were that heavy, aluminum ladders are usually much lighter. You made it look light!
@@Boxalarmtraining But it makes sense when I think about it, it has to support multiple people on it (when rescuing people for instance), while my ladder is designed for one person at a time (although I weight 140lbs, two like me could be on it and still be well below the weight rating)
You are obviously puny, and incredibly soft. That’s the fact of the matter. But that’s still no excuse for why you can’t handle a ladder. Whether you’re big or small, that isn’t what’s important. It’s believing you can, rather than thinking you can’t. You do have the ability, and that’s a fact, my dude. But if you really want it to happen, you’re gonna have to change that attitude. Start pumping some iron, maybe. Nut up, and be a man. Tell yourself you can do it, and then you’ll see that you can. Hang in there, and take care. But don’t forget, life’s not fair. So you might wanna grow a pair. You’re welcome, and good luck 👍🏿 It’s too bad you suck 😢 God bless.
+Matt Hinkle I wish I were I member there. I like the way you train firefighters.. I am a firefighter in Iraq and we have big fires but we don't have such training ... we work almost without training.... I watch such videos to develop myself. .. thank again
+Matt Hinkle Matt, I wish you were an academy instructor. All these tips are great, but the academy I went through probably doesnt allow what you demonstrated.
One of the best training videos I've ever seen. Clear, orderly, multiple perspectives, not overdone. Thank you.
Wow, thanks!
Who in their right mind would not like these videos. Madness. Thanks for sharing and lets keep on getting better
Thank you!
This is a video that's good for anyone who uses ladders on a daily or regular basis, not just firefighters.
I'm new to firefighting (2 years) and learned so much!
Glad I found this. Not a firefighter, but I do have to start using ladders at home to get some work done. Very helpful and very well presented
One of the best ladder tip videos on youtube
+Seth M Thank you very much!
+Matt Hinkle you should make more just like this one. Very good review and I even picked up on some new things.
Excellent video content! Apologies for butting in, I would love your opinion. Have you thought about - Rozardner Lucky Interview Reality (do a search on google)? It is a smashing one off guide for firefighter interview tips without the normal expense. Ive heard some extraordinary things about it and my friend got amazing results with it.
Great video sir. As a new volunteer firefighter I found this extremely helpful!
victoria davis Thank you very much!
Excellent training video!
Dragging a ladder seems like a good way to destroy it, but it's better to destroy a ladder than to arrive at a rescue 5 seconds too late.
A ladder mover might be the answer to the question that no one asked.
Hey just wanted to say this was very helpful currently a recruit for a volunteer department starting the fire academy this in august learning how to throw ladders and the parts of a ladder now with my crew so thats one less thing I have to worry about in the academy but thank you for sharing this video
Hi Matt. Great video, I am a vol Firefighter in the Dominican Republic and we really do not use ladders here, I have been trying to get them to understand how important it is, especially when a firefighter is in trouble, I can say that we do have one, but the chief is always lending it out to construction company's, the ladder was donated by Florida Fire, and it was new, now it is a mess with paint all over it, and most of the time, the rope is broke. There will be a day when they will really need it. And it just may be too late. I am doing what I can, but it is a different world, there ethics are very different, even in the hiring of firefighters, we have 3 new recruits, 18 and 19 years old, they have not been trained, they have been working for about 5 months, no programs, nothing. I have been butting heads with the chief about this for over 2 years, and still nothing, I guess they are waiting for something to happen before making any changes, its prevention, they have no clue, I am doing my best, but do not know how much longer I can continue like this, I cant take them by their hand when we have a fire, I have my own job todo, as they do not know what theirs is, a real shame. Thanks for your service, be safe.
"the chief is always lending it out to construction company's, the ladder was donated by Florida Fire, and it was new, now it is a mess with paint all over it, and most of the time, the rope is broke." WTF...this is how you kill someone
Great video, to the point and centered on efficiency. Clear demonstrations too! Thank you from a probie and FF1/2 candidate
Thank you Captain. Great tips.Not a firefighter, just wanted to be more confident and safe. Outstanding
Thanks
Great video with some alternative methods. Most of our houses in my district have long driveways that make laddering the roof with an aerial quite the challenge. So ground ladders are our "go to" most of the time. If I have a surface that the butt of the ladder can bite into, I like to transition the ladder flat on to my shoulder from the high carry. After this I advance towards the structure and thrust the ladder into the ground gaining enough momentum to raise the ladder in one motion. It is a bear with the 24 or 28, but it is nice and quick with one person. Don't know if you have seen that before, but just an idea! Stay safe!
Thank you!
As a rookie this video blew my mind lol
Really great presentation and information. Thank you; liked it very much.
This is exactly what i am looking for! Thank you very much
Actually I'm from India chennai, I expecting more vedios like this... Thank you
your great teacher. love that. you made it seem so easy. With practice these steps are a 1-2-3
+Amilka Morillo Thank you very much
No, Thank you... I tried doing that at the Academy at they said no..lol I guess they one us to do everything by the book for now.. But soon as i make it, Im doing it your way. heheh
Excellent Tips!! Thanks for sharing!!
7:10 Love the beam raise technique demo
Awesome video brother, thank you so much!!!
Brother outstanding video and prop we are very great full our department got us two. I appreciate you for passing on your knowledge and tips.
Thanks
Great video, its these simple tricks/tactics that make the job easier.
Dan Wilson Jr
"Riding Tailboard"
Thanks Dan, I appreciate that.
Excellent explanation ARE A GREAT TEACHER GREETINGS FROM BOLIVIA
+Antonio pierola cruz Thanks!
way more informative than all the 2 hour long bs OSHA videos. can tell this guy expertly works with ladders everyday and isn't some safety dork who does nothing but sit behind a desk.
I appreciate the tips Matt!
Learned some really neat tricks, great video brother. My one complaint is I’ll be damned if my chief ever catches me dragging a ladder! Otherwise awesome video!
Thanks for the video.
- A Painter.
great presentation thanks
Excellent, thank you
Very nice, and informative.
6 year old video still good for training! About to join my local department
Nicely done
Thanks
Excellent video very helpful! Thank You
Thank you very much Luis Serrano. Make sure you check out our website www.boxalarmtraining.com and subscribe to our channel. We are working on several more videos right now.
Excellent video
Excellent bro.*
Cant wait to try all this with a regular extension ladder. I attempted nearly all of it after watching this and getting all psyched with the 40 footer and was reminded what a 98lb. Weakling I am. Didnt kill anybody, but after just barely getting it raised once, I couldn't move it at all and was nearly spent. When I lowered it, i got it like 70 percent down before the ladder started extending in my hands (should have spun it around first, I think) and I had to let it crash the final five or six feet.
Later I got the tip of my shoe stuck in between the rungs and luckily my toes were spared and I kept control of the ladder or my foot was going with it.
Abandoned the power clean as soon as I assumed the grip.
Once I got it raised (and barely kept it pinned to the building ad it wanted to tip), it was evident it was not on flat ground so I had to try to lift up one leg while sliding something underneath while not allowing it to slide down the entire side of the house. Somehow, it worked.
I dont think I could even carry the ladder vertically with the low hand through, weak hand over method that is the go-to on a 20 footer.
I have no doubt this all would've been awesome with a manageable ladder, but god damn lol. Rough day.
Great!
Gracias! muy buen video! / Thanks! very good video
Great video.
Great video Matt
Damn!! Outstanding freakin tips
Great video sir!
Frank Corteal Thank you
+Matt Hinckley
You try to give the video more brightness it will be great if you do
GOOD TIPS !
+AwakeDude911 Thank you!
Absolutely great tips!!
hey Matt great tips
thanks a lot. u r really helpful
thanks for the tips
Nice video more useful
@0:09 best way to fuck up your back 😂😂😂
Woww really amazing
good stuff
muy bueno soy bombero de ecatepec estado de mexico de manejo de escala
Captain, unfortunately I failed my state test because I did not fully extend the ladder .. I was rung short. There was no command to fully extend. Why do you think they wanted me to fully extend a ladder being their was no assignment or task when raising it? In my book it says nothing about a ladder having to be fully extended. I tied it off perfectly, had the fly out and made contact the entire time.
Sorry to hear that. No idea how the testing process is performed in your area. We raise and extend ladders to reach a location so I’m not sure what the testing criteria was for your test.
I am curious too. It could be specific to the test and not a standard or recommended practice. Perhaps the intention is to “know your ladder’s maximum reach relative to structure visual cues and then draw down to a target area?” It sounds like wasted time but presumably not to be employeed with immediate rescue needs so nominal amount of time to raise to maximum and know limitations of what you have deployed and you can begin planning alternatives if the need arises beyond existing ladder limits...or know you could safely get to a higher point with the existing ladder.
How much does the ladder weight
About 75 pounds for a 24’ extension ladder.
I work with a 375lbs rated fiberglass extension ladder. I whish it was this light lol
To be honest I think this ladder is heavier than your 375lb rated. This is a 24’ AlcoLite rated at 750lbs. It weighs 75lbs. I think most of the fiberglass ladders weigh a good bit less than fire service ladders. Fire service ladders have to meet NFPA1931 and they are way over engineered.
@@Boxalarmtraining So they're about the same weight. Didn't know they were that heavy, aluminum ladders are usually much lighter. You made it look light!
@@Boxalarmtraining But it makes sense when I think about it, it has to support multiple people on it (when rescuing people for instance), while my ladder is designed for one person at a time (although I weight 140lbs, two like me could be on it and still be well below the weight rating)
I’d keep a female singer nearby as well, especially for the really long ones
Thanks I'm a firefighter in Ga I have trouble with ladders due to my size
You are obviously puny, and incredibly soft. That’s the fact of the matter.
But that’s still no excuse for why you can’t handle a ladder.
Whether you’re big or small, that isn’t what’s important.
It’s believing you can, rather than thinking you can’t.
You do have the ability, and that’s a fact, my dude.
But if you really want it to happen, you’re gonna have to change that attitude.
Start pumping some iron, maybe. Nut up, and be a man.
Tell yourself you can do it, and then you’ll see that you can.
Hang in there, and take care.
But don’t forget, life’s not fair.
So you might wanna grow a pair.
You’re welcome, and good luck 👍🏿
It’s too bad you suck 😢
God bless.
What about bringing it back down? Just do everything in reverse?
Yes, just reverse order for most of the techniques.
Just let it go and run like hell yelling something along the lines of " _What the FUCK, Charlie?!_ "
THE HAWK!!!!
Don’t forget about rescuing cats from trees.
Hi
Stud
Driving me crazy lol just use some good gloves
Firefighters are civilians
No
@@nate3452 they are to me. Only real police,sheriff’s and active duty soldiers are my non civilians.
@@conqueringlion420 Okay lol
thanks a lot. u r really helpful
Thank you very much.
+Matt Hinkle
I wish I were I member there. I like the way you train firefighters.. I am a firefighter in Iraq and we have big fires but we don't have such training ... we work almost without training.... I watch such videos to develop myself. .. thank again
Ibraheem Yaseen That's great. Keep up the good work!
+Matt Hinkle Matt, I wish you were an academy instructor. All these tips are great, but the academy I went through probably doesnt allow what you demonstrated.
Firemen breaking down doors