LUF Long Distance Water Supply

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  • Опубликовано: 18 июл 2019
  • Water transportation over long distances.
    Example fields of application: Water supply for large fires over long distances, In case of floodings to remove water, drinking water supply...
    Basic set-up:
    Two oil-hydraulically operated floating pumps are set down in the water and transport approx. 11,000 litres of water per minute (per floating pump approx. 5,500 litres of water per minute) at 2.5 bar over a distance of up to 60 metres to a booster pump on the mainland. The booster pump transports these 11,000 litres of water per minute at 12 bar over a distance of 6 km in a Ø300 mm hose to its destination.
    Configuration Options:
    Configuration 1:
    After the water transport with the first booster pump over 6km, as described in the basic set-up, a second booster pump can be used to transport the water even further. This means that 11,000 litres of water per minute can be supplied over a distance of 12 km.
    Configuration 2:
    It is also possible to connect two independent units of the pump container in parallel. This means that 4 oil-hydraulic floating pumps and 2 booster pumps are used, which means that 22,000 litres of water per minute can be transported over 6 km in two Ø300 mm hoses to the destination.
    For more information visit: www.luf60.at
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Комментарии • 657

  • @lufofficial5711
    @lufofficial5711  3 года назад +108

    LUF Hose Collecting System: ruclips.net/video/0DvKCUfZDHU/видео.html

  • @MrDK0010
    @MrDK0010 3 года назад +111

    This is for establishing a secondary or tertiary supply line for wildfires or large industrial fires. They will have all the manpower and time to do this if the situation becomes bad enough.

    • @martimnunesmartinho6788
      @martimnunesmartinho6788 3 года назад +2

      MrDK0010 but in case of a wildfire say the fire burns out of control they wouldn’t have time to grab the equipment and run away

    • @MrDK0010
      @MrDK0010 3 года назад +11

      This is smth you build up far, far outside the immediate danger zone.

    • @eizarzar6212
      @eizarzar6212 3 года назад

      kbkbk

    • @cvxbxb9550
      @cvxbxb9550 2 года назад

      เดกกกกเฟฟฟฟกตไไำพะัwrhjgtqqqqwei2212124433yyytttstsffgfffffgfffffttt555u5555tu4443335?

    • @prageethsithum4603
      @prageethsithum4603 2 года назад

      🛺🚑🚐🚎🚍🚌🚋🚋🚞🚞🚑🚉🚈🏥

  • @auravibes1980
    @auravibes1980 3 года назад +3

    Nice one of the engineering mile stone. Keep safe keep awake

  • @1999Cheker
    @1999Cheker 3 года назад +232

    Funny how no one seems to understand that this system is not intended as a primary water source.
    It is used when you need big amounts of water over long distances like industrial fires or bush fires.
    We are talking 11000l/minute over a distance of 6km. Of course it is not built up in 2 minutes.

    • @1999Cheker
      @1999Cheker 3 года назад +14

      @wout kwanten 15-30 minutes plus an additional 15 min to fill up the hoses depends on the number of people you have available.
      In germany we have a system that is more efficient and faster. Just look for Hytrans Fire System (HFS)

    • @user-hd2fu5el8q
      @user-hd2fu5el8q 3 года назад

      Юг юг э4 юг

    • @Luke-no3dg
      @Luke-no3dg 3 года назад +1

      Is this not in Germany?

    • @1999Cheker
      @1999Cheker 3 года назад +1

      @@Luke-no3dg when I saw it right it is austria

    • @hexagonium5798
      @hexagonium5798 3 года назад

      @@1999Cheker Yes it is Austria. In some scenes you can see the name of the city. I looked it up and "Rankweil" (the city) is located in Austria.

  • @sunshubian
    @sunshubian 3 года назад +76

    “No! You can’t just shoot foam from a mile away!!!” “ haha scdf 3000gpm large monitor vehicle go brrrr”

    • @gautamrana3857
      @gautamrana3857 3 года назад

      Kjgg🇮🇳🙈📣🤔📣🙂🙂🙂😚😚😙😐☺️🙂🦓🦓🦓🦌🦌🦌🦌🐷🐃🐃🐃🐖🐗🐽🦒🥑🥑🍑🥔🥔🥔🥦🥦🥬🥒🍅🍎🍏🍊🍒🍒🍄🥯🥒🥔🎗🎗🎎🧨🎆🎆🎄🎃🏀🏉⚽️🧱🌎🌏🗺🏜🏝🏘🏥🏤🏪🏪🏭🥁☎️🎹📣📢🔉🔉🔈🔕🎤📠🔋🛄🛄🏧↗️👭🙏👌👍👏🤝🇮🇳

    • @sunshubian
      @sunshubian 3 года назад +1

      Tfw you like a good comment on a video you’ve watched before and you realise it’s you who made the comment,

  • @andyhamilton8940
    @andyhamilton8940 3 года назад +3

    Its like the old "Soupa Pumpah" from FDNY, only more soupah! Gonna have to be sick on hose testing day!

  • @vikashpatel155
    @vikashpatel155 3 года назад +77

    California watching this:👁👄👁

    • @tahunkwai5979
      @tahunkwai5979 3 года назад +1

      i was thinking the same thing that we should have one of each of this full set up in the rural town for when fires happen

  • @iamtheanday
    @iamtheanday 3 года назад +153

    While watching this I realized that I’ve fallen too far into the depths of RUclips.

  • @uchungnguyen7686
    @uchungnguyen7686 8 месяцев назад +1

    Tuyệt vời lắm 💯😍👍🎤🌼🆗🌎

  • @minidriversouthsweden5137
    @minidriversouthsweden5137 3 года назад +9

    Sweet system and when I saw the title I immediately thought they better have enough hose in there to get the supply to where they need it and now I see that they have. They know what they’re doing hopefully they do. Interesting to see how they do it.

  • @DIYTractorstories
    @DIYTractorstories 2 года назад

    Thanks for remember my child hood days.

  • @momostube9625
    @momostube9625 Год назад

    Both comical and fascinating at the same time.

  • @pnwRC.
    @pnwRC. 3 года назад +8

    Neat equipment!

  • @brandongustafson7497
    @brandongustafson7497 3 года назад +1

    Really cool!

  • @ronaldhofman1726
    @ronaldhofman1726 Год назад

    Awesome equipment.

  • @yousrich46
    @yousrich46 3 года назад +4

    For those people trying to criticize it without looking further, this system is for long operations requiring lots of water. For example industrials fires, warehouse fires, forest fires also. THIS IS NOT a primary water source, most of the time water from hydrants is used to tackle smaller fires so no they didn’t take long to get set up. Unless you guys have seen fire departments tackle big forest and industrial fires in minutes which I highly doubt.

    • @OldLordSpeedy
      @OldLordSpeedy 2 года назад +3

      Do not forget you can pump away water from a flooded area too!

  • @guy4822
    @guy4822 3 года назад +105

    This was just a werd flex by this fire department 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @melvincolon6916
      @melvincolon6916 2 года назад

      Qqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqwwwwwwwwwwweeeeeeeeeeeeeeerrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr

  • @robertcallahan9940
    @robertcallahan9940 3 года назад +3

    Great show of teamwork

  • @sabbathbloodysabbath6058
    @sabbathbloodysabbath6058 3 года назад +1

    Nice equipament.

  • @frostsmaker8966
    @frostsmaker8966 3 года назад +2

    They look like ant, organization, teamwork. Awesome !!

  • @blakbird1992
    @blakbird1992 3 года назад +7

    Wow that’s pretty amazing

  • @tonysoriano423
    @tonysoriano423 3 года назад +14

    I’ll deploy it, then putting in my two weeks, cause that’s how long it will take to put back in service.... Fight The Dragon Brother!!!!

    • @EnjoyFirefighting
      @EnjoyFirefighting 3 года назад +1

      actually it's done quite quickly with its modular layout ...

    • @EnjoyFirefighting
      @EnjoyFirefighting 3 года назад +1

      @lee rice nope, not really; Of course it's not as fast as simply deploying a hose from a hose cart or hose bay, but it's not like it would take hours to set the system up and get it going

    • @EnjoyFirefighting
      @EnjoyFirefighting 3 года назад +1

      @lee rice no-one stated that this would work for every location... however in fact many large industries are alongside or nearby rivers and canals, and also commercial and residential areas are often next to lakes, canals and rivers of all sizes. Within a 10 mile radius around my village there are 2 rivers and dozens of lakes, with several lakes already being within 1.5 miles ... and my area isn't quite dominted by lakes; There are some areas which are clearly dominted by lakes or canals throughout a greater area.
      Btw there's the very same issue with long distance water supply when you take plain normal hoses and apparatus, often with multiple Portable Pump Vans / Trucks serving as booster

  • @dudemediocre4412
    @dudemediocre4412 3 года назад +2

    How many years does this take to clean up again?

  • @arthurzeller5754
    @arthurzeller5754 Год назад +1

    What is the purpose with that system with the small pin in the middle with the connecting pin ??

  • @spaceman1596
    @spaceman1596 3 года назад +2

    Haha fire departments tank go brrrr
    4:43

  • @arthurzeller5754
    @arthurzeller5754 Год назад

    Yes i had to look up Liters to gallons (11,000 liters of water per minute) 2,905.?? Very Nice amount

  • @oddpancakegaming4391
    @oddpancakegaming4391 3 года назад +91

    I need one of these to water my lawn.

    • @SANJOYRAIDER0112
      @SANJOYRAIDER0112 3 года назад

      BBC vfv mz Ch BN.

    • @ismailayhan8473
      @ismailayhan8473 3 года назад +1

      0⁰llĺl

    • @carterthreatt9681
      @carterthreatt9681 3 года назад +4

      There is actually something simmering in my area that collects rain water and then is loaded up and taken to farmers where there is a drought

    • @muthumeena9623
      @muthumeena9623 3 года назад

      @@carterthreatt9681 p

    • @gokhanguven8403
      @gokhanguven8403 2 года назад +1

      @@ismailayhan8473 MMO

  • @t-yoonit
    @t-yoonit 3 года назад +6

    Work smarter, not harder. Pass on this setup. I can see this being viable in a very narrow set of instances of long term operation of exposure protection is required. Setup time is horrendous considering the results. But for a long term operation, having that output on unmanned equipment could be very beneficial.

    • @EnjoyFirefighting
      @EnjoyFirefighting 3 года назад +7

      " Setup time is horrendous considering the results" which result? Being able to flow large amounts of water with only one truck instead of numerous trucks on one line or running as shuttle. Of course this isn't what you use every day or once a week, but there are definetly scenarios where large capacity pumps are necessary ... not only large structure fires, but especially during floods. Guess that's why the German Federal Agency for Technical Relief came as mutual aid to the USA after Hurricane Katrina

    • @axel5111
      @axel5111 3 года назад +3

      It's definately worth the effort. German fire engines flow around 2000L per minute, so this system can supply around 5 engines. It'll take at least 5 engines to supply 1 engine over 2 km's. Basically, this thing does what 25 engines normally do. Simple maths: it takes time to set up, but compared to the alternative it's cheaper and easyer to set up. EDIT: I just now realised we are talking 12 km's, wich make the numbers even more ridiculous.

    • @EricWhiteTheGamer
      @EricWhiteTheGamer 3 года назад +1

      Love it. Also during that storm we needed help. But that’s also why the US has pumpers, tenders and tankers. But Germany’s fire Departments are a lot better then the USAs.

  • @adrianwakenshaw963
    @adrianwakenshaw963 3 года назад +4

    Very much a balance of justification for the investment and manpower need versus let it burn!

    • @Wa3ypx
      @Wa3ypx 3 года назад

      Amen Adrian. Unless this is something for long term use, i.e. temporary water main replacement, what benifit is it? That has to be 8" or better hose. How much water does it take to fill this let alone start water movement?

    • @EnjoyFirefighting
      @EnjoyFirefighting 3 года назад +3

      large structure fires are one scnearios of course, but also keep in mind that there are other scenarios where you have to be able to flow large amounts of water, e.g. floods; Try to empty a flooded area by using the average supply and attack hoses and the average pumps on Engines and Tankers ...

    • @Wa3ypx
      @Wa3ypx 3 года назад +2

      @@EnjoyFirefighting Hmmmm in 35yrs on the job we never had to do that. But makes sense!

    • @EnjoyFirefighting
      @EnjoyFirefighting 3 года назад +1

      @@Wa3ypx I know two century floods and several other sometimes severe floods; Some of them lead to mutual aid convoys which basically involved departments from the entire country; Also after hurricane Katrina, apparatus from the German Federal Agency for Technical Relief went to the USA with several high volume pumps trying to empty flooded boroughs; It sure isn't a common scenario happening every year, but when it's necessary I guess department and people are happy that they exist;
      I've also seen a 1st person video from a Dutch FD responding to a structure fire in a warehouse; THey set up this kind of unit right from the beginning to have a great water supply from the nearby canal

  • @finscreenname
    @finscreenname 3 года назад +140

    I'm sure that little bridge was stupid money.

    • @redstonerelic
      @redstonerelic 3 года назад +19

      Would you like to drive a firetruck over that hose and possibly burst it?

    • @kevinvermeer9011
      @kevinvermeer9011 3 года назад +15

      Slightly over engineered, for sure. It's like they designed it with clearances for an F1 car's approach and departure angles, looks like their trucks could have driven over one made of railroad tie cribbing.

    • @finscreenname
      @finscreenname 3 года назад +3

      @@kevinvermeer9011 You know it went like .....
      The system is 14 million dollars.
      How much is the little bridge?
      $14,000.00
      Throw in two...no like I'm paying for it.....

    • @jansteini9612
      @jansteini9612 3 года назад +2

      @@charliebingaman571 Carry the Car by muscles... that would be faster than that

    • @alanowa123
      @alanowa123 3 года назад +9

      It has to handle 30ton/62000lbs fire engines so it has to be tough. Plus it has to be safe. 150% of max load shouldn't be a problem for it.

  • @otgonsurendavga-ochir6716
    @otgonsurendavga-ochir6716 2 года назад

    thats what i call super team work

  • @user-yv7tq3kd8b
    @user-yv7tq3kd8b 3 года назад +4

    Клин который вставляется в палец при сборке переезда через трубу, он за сто фиксируется то? Там же нет ничего, он просто в воздухе висит?

  • @YourLocalIceMan
    @YourLocalIceMan 3 года назад +1

    1:21 that guy was looking like, "did I do it right"?

  • @kennethhuff7158
    @kennethhuff7158 3 года назад

    Impressive.

  • @RobinMichels
    @RobinMichels 3 года назад

    Gute Idee

  • @guntergerhardus9086
    @guntergerhardus9086 3 года назад +1

    optimal und einfach super.

  • @user-iw9bt4vf4i
    @user-iw9bt4vf4i 3 года назад +1

    Красивые игрушки для ребятни поиграть в пожарников...

  • @southronjr1570
    @southronjr1570 3 года назад +1

    That's some serious manpower there. I can't recall being on a department with that many Firefighters available on a shift.

    • @EnjoyFirefighting
      @EnjoyFirefighting 3 года назад +1

      many fire departments can roll up with some good manpower. In my home town they had a station crew of at least 21 fire-fighters at a 47 bay fire station. Many Engines at volunteer departments are staffed with a crew of 9. Last year I was able to film a full house response of 18 units responding at once ...

    • @phatboizbackyardkustomz9006
      @phatboizbackyardkustomz9006 2 года назад

      We have 7 stations in the county I work at we are lucky to get 5 guys on a county all call​

    • @goldencell1571
      @goldencell1571 2 года назад

      قطه اطف

  • @c165vin
    @c165vin 3 года назад +3

    This system has been well thought out, but its not a fast deploy system. It's for a long time and distance water supply. Maybe for use after a earthquake or any long lasting disaster that could use all the water in a city supply. Its use is to augment a water system. I know around here it might look crazy ,but it's well designed.

    • @norrinradd8923
      @norrinradd8923 Год назад +1

      California could use this or Lake Tahoe

  • @fnln3181
    @fnln3181 3 года назад +1

    'Feuerwehr Panzers!' I'm sure I wrote it wrong.
    Interesting water pumping system, tracked water cannons and hose bridging system.
    Blessings to firefighters the world over.

  • @BumberenzoManilupinoCity
    @BumberenzoManilupinoCity 3 года назад +3

    Giant hoses!!!!

  • @brandonnichols1434
    @brandonnichols1434 3 года назад +1

    What is the run time before needing to refuel? Say 50% power for x amount of hours like with forest fires where your at it for days and having trucks come and fill there water holds

  • @vulgivagu
    @vulgivagu 3 года назад +75

    Why do these informative videos have to have crap music

    • @TheNamesArif
      @TheNamesArif 3 года назад +3

      It's like the kind of music that plays when a crappy superhero is getting ready

    • @averymarkow3815
      @averymarkow3815 3 года назад +3

      Fuck you that music slaps

    • @UltraNyan
      @UltraNyan 3 года назад +2

      @@averymarkow3815 Music was dope indeed

  • @SailorAllan
    @SailorAllan 3 года назад

    about those ramps to drive over the black hose----those single safety pins in the middle of the connecting pins --how do they keep the pins from moving so they do not shake out of the ramp sections? why don't the big pins have a flange on one end, and the safety pin goes on the other end ?

    • @stevez1094
      @stevez1094 3 года назад

      I was wondering the same thing.

    • @CDB-hf5wn
      @CDB-hf5wn 3 года назад +1

      The pin locates in a central hole on the ramp

  • @farmerlucas1853
    @farmerlucas1853 3 года назад +2

    When you realize one of these would be priceless in california rn...

  • @vindivergilio3482
    @vindivergilio3482 3 года назад +10

    Can you imagine being the probies having to repack that 12" (?) Black hose and the officer not telling them it was mechanized??? Seriously...can they justify the cost by how many times they will actually need it?

    • @nightfury8440
      @nightfury8440 3 года назад +1

      It's based on a stock truck chassis. And it might be a swappable bed. Also it's Germany.

    • @EnjoyFirefighting
      @EnjoyFirefighting 3 года назад +1

      there are some apparatus which are used like once in a decade but the equipment still HAS TO be provided for the case that sth happens. I know an Aerial in a German museum which never ever (!) went to an actual emergency call. In the city where I grew up the FD have a nitrogen vaporizer with an estimated call volume of 1 per year; In the town where I studied the chief told me "I've never seen that Pod Carrier on an actual emergency call before" after I filmed it responding to a fire call.

    • @Timo-M
      @Timo-M 3 года назад +2

      Night Fury Those are Austrian firefighters.

    • @Cthippo1
      @Cthippo1 3 года назад +1

      FDNY used to have something similar called the Superpumper system. I think the real use for this is a situation where the municipal water system goes down and you need to supply massive fire flows. Is it worth it? They think so.

    • @EnjoyFirefighting
      @EnjoyFirefighting 3 года назад +2

      @@Cthippo1 it definetly is; And while these systems can flow even more than the former SuperPumper, the FDNY runs a few of these things today as well

  • @bhagyalakshmikandadi6802
    @bhagyalakshmikandadi6802 3 года назад

    Wonderful to see these mechine ✌️👌👌👌

  • @whiteboysixty5
    @whiteboysixty5 3 года назад +22

    That kink in the supply line is gonna cost them a ton of friction

    • @EnjoyFirefighting
      @EnjoyFirefighting 3 года назад +3

      they can still supply nozzles which can flow 14,000 gpm

    • @lucasdJAdam
      @lucasdJAdam 3 года назад +1

      Thats what the pump is for.

  • @tobysmith3266
    @tobysmith3266 3 года назад +1

    If only they had this in America

  • @nickjohnson7688
    @nickjohnson7688 3 года назад +2

    imagine learning there's a leak somewhere

  • @HungNguyen91622
    @HungNguyen91622 3 года назад

    We need that in California now

    • @GMan-yv8cb
      @GMan-yv8cb 3 года назад

      You need some other things FIRST !

  • @georgehasler142
    @georgehasler142 3 года назад +22

    Looks like a lot of hard but it looks like they know what they are doing

    • @grahamscobell1710
      @grahamscobell1710 3 года назад

      I think the fire would have burnt its self out bu the time they have it all rigged!

    • @pranshsingh4426
      @pranshsingh4426 3 года назад

      Rdr. Let

    • @pranshsingh4426
      @pranshsingh4426 3 года назад

      00

    • @christianboer9392
      @christianboer9392 3 года назад +1

      Graham Scobell usually this kind of equipment would be used in big fires (which could last for days/weeks) without a large enough water supply near the fire. And it also works great if you need a lot of water for those water cannons.

  • @carlloar7232
    @carlloar7232 3 года назад +24

    They could use that system in parts of California

    • @overlordgaming752
      @overlordgaming752 3 года назад +3

      Carl Loar California has similar systems in use, although the Cal Fire usually uses fire retardant, fire lines, and air support to fight most wild fires, they have used very similar set ups for massive industrial firws

    • @overlordgaming752
      @overlordgaming752 3 года назад +1

      lee rice “long distance water supply” it’s not designed to go up a mountain, it’s a supply line. It’s designed to bring water along a long area that lacks a hydrant or a static source to draft off of, allowing firefighters to have water without using a shuttling system with drop tank and lots of tankers. Misusing a system for something it was never designed to do is no reason to write it off

    • @overlordgaming752
      @overlordgaming752 3 года назад +1

      lee rice no. No one ever said it was, is California one giant mountain? No. There are flatter areas and large roaming hills. Wild land tactics change between them. If I need to set up a forward supply location to fill up a helicopter to allow it to more effectively do it’s job, I can use a long supply line to do that. If we’re utilizing rolling pumpers I can set a fill point much closer to the location of attack, if we’re trying to hold the line at a series of houses, we can use multiple long supply lines and boost pumpers to set up 1 1/2 attack lines with combo nozzles and create a fog cover to keep the fire back. There’s tons of ways you can utilize a system like this, although I don’t expect someone who doesn’t fight fire to understand the massive utility a system like this could offer the teams in the fields. There’s no way in hell someone’s dragging this line anywhere, supply line weighs enough dry, trying to haul any more then 500 feet with multiple people becomes an extremely difficult task, hense the truck deployment method shown in the video, alleviating the need for someone to drag 10,000 feet + of supply line. This is quite obviously designed to be used to extend my water source not being water up a mountain.

    • @overlordgaming752
      @overlordgaming752 3 года назад +3

      lee rice fire equipment is pricy, always has been and always will be. The fire department I’m on just finished paying off a 1.2 million dollar 100 foot ladder truck, the tax payers pay for their own safety, how much their willing to fund us will directly affect our ability to keep you safe. You should talk to your local fire department and see if they have the money to keep up with what’s required of them, the personnel, or anything in general. Unless your in a large city everyone is understaffed, underfunded and under equipped. I’m a tax payer too and I know my taxes go to necessary equipment. Btw that truck costs less than a fire engine, so mr tax payer, would you rather help your state buy a new engine at the price of 750,000 dollars or buy one of these for 300,000? To be honest I think it’s pretty shit of you to say something like that, how would you feel if it was your house or your property and the fire department didn’t have something they needed, what if they have to wait 30+ minutes to get water because of the shuttle distance, your arrogance and misunderstanding of the fire service is astounding since you think your opinion means anything at all, instead of being useless waste of oxygen how about you actually volunteer and do something

  • @robertchinnock8017
    @robertchinnock8017 3 года назад +19

    We need acouple of these here in Australia

    • @elizabethridenbaugh7731
      @elizabethridenbaugh7731 3 года назад +1

      Are your guys wild fires still going on?

    • @robertchinnock8017
      @robertchinnock8017 3 года назад

      @@elizabethridenbaugh7731 hey... no they are out now witch is great.. alot of homes lost and wild life hurt or burnt alive and some live stock hurt as well

    • @johnnz4375
      @johnnz4375 3 года назад

      It has been around for about 35 years, so what are they waiting for........

    • @yousrich46
      @yousrich46 3 года назад

      Robert Chinnock they gotta start expanding their airplane fleet to fight fires, it looked to me like they lacked a bit on this.

    • @MrRCGNL
      @MrRCGNL 3 года назад +2

      Well .. Call the Dutch . . . :-)
      Basically, it's a Dutch invention from the 70's and one of the main manufacturers is based in Holland (Hytrans).
      Over here, every district has several of these standard hook-pods, which can also be transported by civil trucks like those of construction Cie's
      Not only used for Industrial/Forest fires, but also for large normal fires, where the hydrant systems lacks capacity.
      In most districts, there called by protocol in case of 'Large Fire' (3 pumps) or worse.
      Typical deployment time from call to water approx 30mins

  • @timothyshibu3098
    @timothyshibu3098 3 года назад +8

    RIP to the guy that has to roll the whole thing back up

  • @brandonwagner3873
    @brandonwagner3873 3 года назад

    Cool

  • @erdub84
    @erdub84 3 года назад

    THAT IS SO COOL

  • @meirforta7554
    @meirforta7554 3 года назад +1

    It seems like a lot of work

  • @ph11p3540
    @ph11p3540 3 года назад +1

    That is some really severe duty pumper and hoses. Like those big industrial fire trucks with their 12 inch 8000 gpm hoses down near those Texas and Louisiana refineries. Would love to see the Huston fire department with those inundator tank robots.

  • @superbeast8373
    @superbeast8373 3 года назад

    Is this an 80's commercial?

  • @althuelectronics5158
    @althuelectronics5158 3 года назад

    Good technology

  • @Strazak_z_Rusinowic
    @Strazak_z_Rusinowic 3 года назад +2

    WOW! 😎 👍🏻

  • @shaijujose1630
    @shaijujose1630 2 года назад

    Super

  • @user-kh5tv9sv7y
    @user-kh5tv9sv7y 3 года назад

    надо было не пожарных заставлять собирать эту систему , а разработчиков . странно что реактивный ствол самоходный , а к фильтру на заборном рукаве никто не догадался приварить пару колес

  • @cts
    @cts 3 года назад

    From the lake they taketh, to the lake they giveth...

  • @meconlimited3896
    @meconlimited3896 3 года назад +24

    The best thing of this system is that you can work against gravity with out any pressure loss.

  • @user-in8di8fb2w
    @user-in8di8fb2w 3 года назад +5

    Да пока разложат всю эту конструкцию, тушить нечего будет

    • @shipuchk4
      @shipuchk4 3 года назад

      Реально, так медленно, мне кажется у них недавно был сончас, такие медленные и соные

    • @Wolframcarbid85
      @Wolframcarbid85 3 года назад +1

      Вы не поняли маленько, это плановая тренирова/профилактика по наполнению прудов водой во время засухи. Так как мелкие водоёмы высыхают изза отсутвия осадков таким образом в Германии пожарные части их заполняют

  • @jonclem2269
    @jonclem2269 2 года назад

    It’s all fun and games until it’s time to bed all that hose…..

  • @reeper1351
    @reeper1351 3 года назад

    So they need a winch for that? 8:30

  • @JONI_SAM
    @JONI_SAM 3 года назад +4

    по любому всё попроще сделать можно

  • @mystixa
    @mystixa 3 года назад +8

    Strange how something can be so over engineered and under engineered at the same time. All the functionality of moving water seems to be fine but the setup is pretty hacked. No wheels on large metal pieces requiring multiple people to carry. No outside ridge on the ramps that would keep vehicles from slipping off. An entire 6" metal wedge piece made specially as an extra connection instead of just tapering the ramp to the ground. etc etc

    • @MushookieMan
      @MushookieMan 3 года назад +3

      It's made to be stowable. And no "outside ridge" will stop a vehicle from driving off the edge of a ramp.

    • @cantsolvesudokus
      @cantsolvesudokus 3 года назад +4

      Also remember, nobody knows on which terrain they have to use the bridge. Keeping it simple/flexible might be a advantage here.

  • @ossi1127
    @ossi1127 3 года назад +17

    The Hytrans Fire System already exists ...

    • @danieldorr7517
      @danieldorr7517 3 года назад +2

      HTFS: 3.000l/min @ 10bar & LUF: 11.000l/min @ 12bar... just a little difference ;)

    • @ossi1127
      @ossi1127 3 года назад +1

      @@danieldorr7517 sorry but the HFS HydroSub 1400 delivers 45000 lpm / 12 bar

    • @danieldorr7517
      @danieldorr7517 3 года назад

      Ouch... I didn’t even know that it exists. Shame over my head and thanks for the input. 😄👍

  • @dawidmigdal
    @dawidmigdal 3 года назад +1

    Da ist ein SW 2000 nix dagegen :))

  • @hockeysyko1
    @hockeysyko1 3 года назад

    California can use this for forest fires

  • @martinschreurs1
    @martinschreurs1 3 года назад +4

    In the Netherlands there are since 1998 more than 100 of similar systems in action. The purpose is to bring water over up to 3 kilometre for feeding firetrucks when needed. Every Safety Region (Kreis) has at least one of these units. See an excercise at : ruclips.net/video/7lqNZOsOrQM/видео.html

  • @ffdtower1
    @ffdtower1 3 года назад +7

    Whole city is on fire...

    • @dd313car
      @dd313car 3 года назад +2

      Next one who didn't understand when this water supply is used

  • @tonyfincham6126
    @tonyfincham6126 2 года назад

    What’s new some old hands may remember the hose layers A, F, S, in convoy from Morton In Marsh in case of war ,

  • @user-iw9bt4vf4i
    @user-iw9bt4vf4i 3 года назад +1

    Посмотрел бы я как этот водяной кунг, как бы он поработал в сибирскую минусяру, пока все разложат, так и все и сгорит, а что сгорит, то не сгниет...

  • @tothemaxx1991
    @tothemaxx1991 3 года назад +21

    This seems so long winded that I'm unsure how useful it could possibly be.

    • @maxwesthoven5819
      @maxwesthoven5819 3 года назад +3

      Well I think Firetrucks with built in tanks would arrive to the scene first and immediately start putting out the fire while this system sets up and then it can take over for much longer, because it doesn’t have a small built in tank.

    • @skspieszko30
      @skspieszko30 3 года назад +1

      I want to tell you that if you have 2,5k litres on firetruck, you will be out of water like just in one minute or so

    • @calvingreene90
      @calvingreene90 3 года назад +2

      The great distance that the water is moved is what makes it useful. All the water in the world is useless if you can't put it on the fire.

  • @kennybo-iy2ed
    @kennybo-iy2ed 3 года назад

    i'm getting rid of that bloody chip pan, burned the kitchen again before the fire brigade got there.

  • @fernandomiranda9514
    @fernandomiranda9514 3 года назад

    Nossa que top que pais é isso?

  • @Commissar0617
    @Commissar0617 3 года назад +1

    ... soft hose for drafting????

    • @axel5111
      @axel5111 3 года назад +2

      No, semi submersible pumps in the water for drafting.

  • @cia_toxicdoge8733
    @cia_toxicdoge8733 3 года назад +3

    Ok....why
    You set it up and by the time it’s set up the fire your putting out has gone out by it’s self

    • @kadragon3764
      @kadragon3764 3 года назад

      With the ramps to go over the hose definitely. Judging that it took like 3 minutes on the video, depending on how close the vehicle itself is, we're talking like 15-20 minutes set up time to pull everything out, carry it over, and bolt it in.

    • @creativejamieplays7185
      @creativejamieplays7185 3 года назад +3

      As someone else commented earlier. This is not for a small house fire. Its for something like a wild fire.

  • @falrus
    @falrus 3 года назад

    What was the point to remove container from the first vehicle?

    • @EnjoyFirefighting
      @EnjoyFirefighting 3 года назад +3

      you can grab equipment easily from a lower level ...

  • @sh_stash3838
    @sh_stash3838 3 года назад

    Haben wir schon vor 10 Jahren gehabt!!!
    Einfacher und selbst gebaut!

  • @InazeniRistisari
    @InazeniRistisari 6 месяцев назад

    ❤❤😊

  • @johnroberts9560
    @johnroberts9560 3 года назад

    Wow , that's really cool ,what country is this ? 👍😀🚒

    • @EnjoyFirefighting
      @EnjoyFirefighting 3 года назад +5

      system was invented in the Netherlands, but the video clips right here are from Austria

    • @johnroberts9560
      @johnroberts9560 3 года назад

      @@EnjoyFirefighting Oh ok I appreciate your response , thanks my friend !

  • @agenhartnahoopiisr
    @agenhartnahoopiisr 10 месяцев назад

    How much does it cost

  • @tejaswaroop528
    @tejaswaroop528 3 года назад +1

    Does anyone understand how that safety pin helps?

    • @CDB-hf5wn
      @CDB-hf5wn 3 года назад +1

      Yes. It locates in a hole in a lug on the ramp to stop sideway movement either way

  • @zyglo9826
    @zyglo9826 3 года назад +5

    In my part of the USA, there’s no way the elected officials would ever allocate the funds for a very expensive, limited purpose vehicle that might be needed once or twice every 5 years.

    • @EnjoyFirefighting
      @EnjoyFirefighting 3 года назад +8

      and then there are situations where mutual aid responses from abroad (!) are necessary to deal with the events which hardly ever happen but definetly will at some time ...
      Concerning your statement "very expensive, limited purpose vehicle" ... look closely at the video. It's a Pod Carrier / Roll-off container truck / hooklift truck: that equipment pod is special and purpose-built, but the truck can be used for dozens of different special equipment pods (containers), so this is far from limited purpose. It's not an entire truck built for only one purpose, but a carrier truck designed to handle all kinds of rarely used special equipment pods. They can range from Heavy Rescue to foam tanks, tanks with frozen carbondioxide and to nitrogen vaporizers, hazmat, decontamination, radiation protection, collapse rescue, crane equipment, basically any special operation you can think of

    • @redbaron474
      @redbaron474 3 года назад +2

      I'll bet CALIFORNIA is wishing they had at least one of these right now...

    • @OldLordSpeedy
      @OldLordSpeedy 2 года назад +2

      Do forget one point! It can be a supply hose line *to the fireplace* but it can be a *pump water from a flooded place* back into the river or sea too. Some hazard fire places are far away from water or broken supply hose lines build in earth or flooded places or repair/renew a channel or over flooded dams ...
      It is use here on a fire apparatus but can do so many more.

  • @damianpascual97
    @damianpascual97 3 года назад

    What’s the point of putting the pin if the pole can still fall out the other end

    • @patrickm9831
      @patrickm9831 3 года назад +1

      The pins fall into a little bracket that is midline to each section. At 5:05 there is a decent view of the brackets. The smaller sections on the ends of the ramps do not seem to have the same bracket though. Which seems odd

    • @damianpascual97
      @damianpascual97 3 года назад

      Patrick m I see it thanks for the info

  • @MatthewMello
    @MatthewMello 3 года назад +1

    I love to know how they were able to draft with those soft hoses without them collapsing.

    • @kenmeinken8115
      @kenmeinken8115 3 года назад +3

      It looked like those were hydraulic operate pumps they floated out with the hoses.

    • @MatthewMello
      @MatthewMello 3 года назад +1

      @@kenmeinken8115 That is new to me, and something I haven't seen. I am use to seeing a hard suction hose hooked up to a pumper.

    • @axel5111
      @axel5111 3 года назад +4

      @@MatthewMello The units in the water are floating//semi-submursible waterpumps indeed.

    • @mk84ldb
      @mk84ldb 3 года назад

      @@MatthewMello I could use some hard suction

    • @roberthohberg2666
      @roberthohberg2666 3 года назад +1

      They are not sucking; the large machinery in the water are pumps (hydraulically powered via the two black lines connected to each) they force water into the soft tube

  • @alinsonassis
    @alinsonassis 3 года назад

    That's a city size humidifier

  • @saave47
    @saave47 Год назад

    👍👍👍👍👍

  • @fladder64
    @fladder64 3 года назад +1

    Looks like a bigger version of the Dutch "GWT" system, which has a transport hose of 150mm over 3km and no fire robots.

  • @murillobragatto2436
    @murillobragatto2436 2 года назад

    i só é uma máquina de fazer chuva

  • @bohemoth1
    @bohemoth1 3 года назад

    The "CONCEPT" is good. But in reality for larger departments such as The New York City Fire Department. This is unworkable.
    The amount of time to assemble and deploy is extremely critical during a FAST MOVING FIRE.
    I really love the HOSE BRIDGING EQUIPMENT.

  • @mahindersingh8842
    @mahindersingh8842 3 года назад

    Nice drama 👍

  • @irishgaming8061
    @irishgaming8061 3 года назад

    I want this.

  • @watertriton
    @watertriton 3 года назад +2

    It looked like the clouds were delivering a lot more water that day.