Master Chief 2.0... He’s much better... but...
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- Опубликовано: 21 апр 2021
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ok
Ok
HALLO
Hi mat how r u
Matt im your number one fan I've been watching your videos since I was six
Rhino lining that bed might be a good idea, since you could be dealing with a slick surface if water gets on it.
That's a definite need those beds are slicker that than a grease monkey floor
Also drilling a hole the size of the tube coming from the tank into the bed would eliminate tubes on the outside of the truck. I would drill straight down into the long cabinet you plan on going all the way across and rhino lining the hole.
More people need to like this so Matt sees it!!!
Here's a comment so he's more likely to see your comment
Yea, water is mean
Matt must've not seen my comment about the transport lock pins being in. That thing was still bouncing WAY too much for the cab air ride to be working. Lol
Matt look at this
MATTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
See and be of the knowing!
Read this. And get a O&M manual for the truck Matthew! And give that welder kid a pile of stainless sheet and let him build you a low profile baffled tank the size of the whole bed. And quit using domestic plastic pipe on a ATV fire tender like it's a chicken coop, you hick 😬😂
We need Matt to see this
1. Have a back-up pump installed, in case one fails mid-fire.
2. Install a locker with a few fire extinguishers - A, B, C and D - and each class can put out a different type of fire.
3. Have a locker with spare gas for the pumps.
4. Mount a big LED light cannon that you can move around to see at night.
5. Have a fireproof suit and shoes in the truck, mabey a gasmask.
6. Bring tools, axes, crowbars and stuff.
7. Secure the truck underneath agains fire and high temperatures, so nothing is melting.
This is beyond matt's capabilities. He just wants to play fireman for views.
Oh and since he would be fighting grass land fires in his area. A good back pack style of a leaf blower would be a good tool to have the rig. If you haven't seen how good a leaf blower can put out fires. You should look up how they are used to fight fires.
He doesn’t need a fucking fire engine. A brush truck does the same thing. You don’t need an SCBA for a wildland you whacker.
@@wombat3635 what's wrong with being safe
@@spectrumboy6103 Not a single wildland ff wears an SCBA. You a junior?
If you're going through the deck anyway, just flip the tank 180° and plumb the line straight down. That way you don't need to run laps to turn on the water then start the pump
On the driver's side.
I was thinking the same thing.
Or rig an electric start for the pump and run it to the cab
@@chrisr5201 Agreed if there is room to mount the pump on the driver's side. Also, the slide-out tray mentioned above would help with access to the pump. Have some kind of QD mount on the pump frame if you have a natural source to fill the tank from, it would be easy to switch the lines and pump into the tank.
I came to the comment section to see if anyone had mentioned that already. Good idea!
I’m a 6 year firefighter in Tennessee and we use a slide style tray for a lot of our pumps which keeps the pump tucked under the main body but when we need it you simply slide it out, it gives you room in the back for your hoses to connect and ease of access to start and maintain your pump while running it.
This is an underrated comment, he can probably even find a way to reuse the existing slides for it.
What area of tn are you in brother? I'm looking for a job.
Bump
pog idea
Was going to post to put that pump on a frame that slides. Makes getting to it easier for maintenance and connecting hoses.
Should’ve sprayed all that water on top of the hq for your rain water collection to fill your tank back up
It fills up super fast though.
I was thinking the same thing recycle lol
Oh I bet it does fill up super fast.. when it decides to rain in Texas lol
Not to mention just not having to deal with the runoff issues he probably just created from all that water! 😄
Yeah you idiot! Sorry Matt lol
mat: dont poop on my fire truck
bird: poops
mat: welcome to demolition ranch, today we’re looking if a bird will stop a 50 cal
Look for baffle balls for that tank. They are like giant wiffle balls that you can throw in to stop the sloshing of water. We use them in 1500 gallon tanks on our water trucks at work and it makes a giant difference in surge when you hit the breaks
*18 years as a firefighter* A one inch hose reel would be fine for what you're using it for. I would mount the reel on the back of the truck for easy deployment on either side. You also need to think about tools. You can put a lot of fire out with a shovel, McCleod and a Pulaski (wildland fire ax).
also
Sand
agreed majority of the time that I'm fighting brush fires I am using a rake or a shovel.
What Tom said ^^^
Plus Pulaskis are badass.
"spraying mayonnaise off my body... that's a long story"
oh, so donut was around again
Doing gear reviews, his favorite.
" *Tac-pack!* "
The end!😂😂😂😂 “ If i can’t put out a fire with that amount of water... I started to big of a fire” 💀💀💀 can we get a shirt
Yep. He hasnt ever fought a fire...but he is learning.
who else thinks matt should get turnout gear so he doesn't burn himself in the event of a fire lol
Also get a set of wildland gear
SCBA anyone....
Yepper, he needs turnout gear, and SWAT gear, just in case....
Yess he definitely would need it
I got an extra set of wild land gear if I can find it I’ll send it to him.
"Its 4.20pm on 4/20, no idea what that means, back in 10 minutes"
🤣
Matt should have had an armful of doritos or other gas station junk food when he restarted the recording :-)
You should do a tee shirt sale and make it a donation to the local fire department. Do a video for it with the guys from the FD and they could teach you all sorts of stuff.
Edit: check out “The Urban Rescue Ranch” too. He’s got a violent Kevin.
That would be cool
Good idea!!!
Could, not should.
@@williamwinder3466 why shouldn't he?
@@specialtrades12 He should! ;-)
You might want to paint the tank. We had to do it with our water truck to keep algae from growing. Just tape off a center line so you can see the water level
put female cam locks on both ends of the hoses, male ends on all the equipment so you never have to worry about which end you need to hook stuff up
Matt: don't poop on my fire truck bird
Bird: poops on fire truck
Matt: Today on demolition ranch we find out if a bird will stop a 50 BMG
and then he brings it to his clinic and tries to fix it?
You should rotate the tank so the valve is on the same side as the other controls.. You could also get a shorter hose to the pump. Keep all controls in one area. You could also plumb up your auxiliary fuel tank to the pump so there is always adequate supply or At least make a system to refill from there
I'd also have the pump and all on the driver side. Makes faster access for him to just hop out and get going.
Here's a comment so he's more likely to read your comment
Was thinking the same thing, turn the tank so pump, valve and everything is all on the same side. Also black out the tank so it doesn't grow algae. Rhino lining the bed will help if it gets wet.
His aux tank is diesel, he'd have to get a diesel pump. Or install a new gas tank.
@@craigfox6870 There is an auxiliary gas tank on the truck that held gasoline. He pointed that out in another video. The diesel tank is for the engine that runs the truck.
That side door on the bed is originally intended for the ladder that is currently hanging from the back of the tailgate. Trust me. I've had to remove and store that thing more times, in my life, than I'd care to remember. I like your setup ideas though!
The only other things I would think to recommend would be a second pump for redundancy (imagine your $500 pump dying mid-fire) and maybe look at getting a surplus military water trailer for double or more extra capacity that you don't have to load on to the bed. With a second water source and second pump, you can really do a lot of good against a brush fire.
👍
Pro tip: if you have a fire that is so big that you already dumped 500 gallons onto it and it’s still burning, you probably will want the actual fire department there anyways :P
Honestly if it isn't close to out after the first 100 then the next 400 should be to buy time for the fire department to get there. They would much rather be called and it be out when they get there than to be called once it is already out of control.
@@Matthew-sp5kv Very good advice!
Just let the grown boy play with his new little fire truck! LOL
He knows that with that water capacity he probably wouldn't extinguish the fire on that pile of christmas trees! LFAO
I am guessing yall arent firefighters. I say this not to be mean in any way but I can assure you, even on relatively small brush fires 500 gallons goes in a flash. Our pumper trucks have 2,000 gal tanks and last about 5 minutes using the booster line only, the 1.5 inch line can flow up to 275 gallons a minute meaning a 500 gal tank will last about as long as a 15 year old boy on prom night.
You might want to set the pump on like a drawer slide. So you can slide the pump in and out for maintenance. Slide the tank back a few feet then you could have all your hoses and your reel in front of the tank. You could also weld tabs down on the bed and use your ratchet straps like bands over the tank. You should also set the plastic tank on a rubber mat. The mat will give you more friction than a painted bed holding it better in place.
You hit on it a little bit but, you were onto something with going thru the bed with the fill hose. And also going to need more “T’s” on your output/input so you can fill with your pump. You’re going to need more ball valves as well so you can set your path of flow into and out of the tank.
Or just make you a 2” labeled manifold.
Right above the pump is a set of what appears to have been drawers--with the rails still there. If the bottom of that compartment is open then he can probably make a bracket that moves and is supported by those slides.
And if you're mounting it next to the fuel tank, upgrade to a diesel pump and plumb it to the truck tank.
@Michael Woodworth Ahh, wasn't aware of that. Still I wonder if they could support the weight for this purpose (though not sure if the bottom of the compartment was open, probably not).
@@chrisw.p5665 you and I think alike
I was going to say the same thing. If he built the box and put it on some type of rolling platform it would easy access.
I haven't seen anyone mention this yet. You need a pump to tank recirculate line. Basically a line that goes from the pump back to the tank for when you shut off the hose. Instead of the water backing up and building pressure inside of the pump, it dumps water back into the tank. That way it doesn't burn out the pump if you leave the hose closed for too long. You can hear the workload of the pump increase when you close the hose, which isn't good for it.
Ok here's the deal Matt. I was a firefighter for a 20 years. A list of brush truck tools. Fan rake, steel rake, shovels, and brooms. All to make fire lines to contain the fire. A chain saw to drop trees or clear snags so the fire can't jump. The secret to killing brush fires is to it from burning fuel aka grass, brush, leaves and dead vegetation. Then soak her down. Backpack water sprayers are a plus too aka bladder tanks. Always keep a pair of jeans, boots, and a long sleeve button up shirts on the truck. Brush truck attire. Also some high Lumen spotlights. Go light makes a awesome remote spot light you can point 360 around because fires don't go to bed at night.
👍
All good points
Later on when you get to the point that you are trying to fill from unclean sources of water such as creeks, lakes, and ponds, make sure you get a filter cage to put on the end of your suction hose to keep mud, algae, and other non-water materials out of your pump and tank.
I thought the same thing 💯
Any time non potable water (any water source you can't drink from) is run in the tank, use some sort of treatment or algicide to keep the tank from "gooing" up! To pipe the suction hose into the fitting below the pump, you need to seal the top. Install the 100' hose and reel next to the pump, turn the tank around to drain on the same side the pump is on, Tie the pump in with unions and make up some 18" splice pieces to allow the pump to be run slid out from under, get a couple of sets of brush fire tools and mount them handy, make up a suction hose as long as the pump you have is rated to lift and make a home for it aboard, and last but not least, put a post mounted nozzle on the back of the truck. What could go wrong with any of that? FR
@@fredericrike5974 Some times you have to use the algicide AFTER the emergency though...
~( 'w')/
I also said this LOL
@@DeliciousDeBlair Actually, I'm yanking Matt's .....chain. His alma mater, Texas A&M , is one of the training and development centers for fire fighters in Texas. He isn't ever going to get over being an Aggie- he needs to make it work for him.
Matt is just reliving his childhood by getting large trucks and playing with them.
LOL... There is that phrase: "The difference between men and boys, is the price of their toys."
I mean.. isn't that the point?
It’s a good idea.
@@jreyman you left out the size of their feet.
Reliving his childhood? I don’t think met ever stopped living his childhood
To get the weight balance back and put the tank further towards the rear of the bed you could have the kid who built exoskeleton on the front of the truck build you a set of foldable stairs on the drivers side to make it easier to get on and off the bed
Honestly, I think you'll appreciate having space left on the bed, as it is now. Now you need a few metal cabinets on each side, that you can reach from the ground, for your tools, replacement fittings, a chainsaw, crowbars, and one helluva first aid kit, space blankets, hand fire extinguishers, and your big ass lunchbox! Love the alterations you did in this episode!!! :)
Might wanna black out the tank if you're gonna fill it up from river, lakes etc. to prevent algae growth.
Those huge cans would be great.
Good idea
Rain water is no better, the black tank should be a thing though .
Would need something to show fill amount like he has on that cabin tank too.
Bleach
Mare: the house is on fire, I’m calling the fire department.
Matt: no need, we have master chief
Definitely a great rig to have sitting around.
Yes
axes, shovels, elbow to the exterior on your outflow, baffles, and paint watertank leaving level window.( one strip of one two inch paint tape.)
Go to your local fire department and check out their brush truck, take notes, and make your modifications from that visit.
i second this
Matt, you should mount the pump on the driver side of the truck so that everything is in one place and you aren't running around the truck. Plus, you should mount a hose real on each side, so that two people can spray at the same time if needed
Or just turn the tank 180 degrees
My thoughts are similar > tank with outlet towards front for Even weight distribution and pump on drivers side makes the inlet feed shorter plus quicker access
The pump that he has really is not adequate for running 2 hoses at the same time. It doesn't have enough pressure to keep the single soft hose fully pressurized with a wide-open nozzle. It would be hard-pressed to run 2 hoses. Not to mention if that pump can drain that tank in around 10 minutes, running 2 hoses would drain it even faster.
@@2020Max1 this is the case with the hose he has but if he downsized to the 1 inch hose he could possibly run two of those
@@2020Max1 but yeah a bigger pump would be better
When he was spraying in the front, the way the red lights made the mist glow was BADASS!!
Me and every other plumber is shaking their heads watching you put a 2 inch test T on that pump Lmaoo
my first thought when he dumped the bag was "thats not a pressure pitting" lol. should be fine since its not on the pressure side tho
Plumbing supplies are low down in Texas right now. Maybe some out state plumbers should him what he needs to do the job right.
@@paulbadtram748 I design pump systems and this made me cringe
Bro! YOU’RE THE GUN GUY! Get a water canon turret set up on the back of that bed so you can stand on the top and SHOOT water off of that beast.
turrets use a lot of water and unless he has a remote one, a hand line is way more efficient.
But it'd be so cool....
He has a turret ring hatch in the top of the cab, might as well use that!
That truck has roof hatch.
@@astormofwrenches5555 cool and practical are different tho.
Matt...now that you are officially a fireman with his own truck...I think it's time Mere had a Fireman Calendar with yours truly hanging up in her office
LOL LOL Sounds like a Winner !!!
But dont forget all the guns! Gotta have them!!!!
You're going to be in a calendar in Mere's office?
The equivalent to the playboy calendar...
The potential for 'Thats what she said" jokes in this video is biblical.
Yea lol
You are on to something there Matt. At work, we didn’t have a fire truck like that, but we did have a pressure water set upon a flat bed, much like you are explaining. Our piping went through the bed, so you didn’t have anything hanging off the side. Then we had a hose real at the back end of bed. Motor was mounted the same way you described (on a tray and bolted down).
Matt "TODAY WE'RE USING A ALOT OF INCENDIARY ROUNDS TO START A FIRE, WHY? BECAUSE I HAVE A FIRETRUCK TO PUT IT OUT!"
today on demolition ranch, how much gasoline does it take to stop a 50cal incendiary ?!
@@SlurmDude I'd love to see that
You should colab with Skeeter Fire Apparatus to build the baddest Wildland Rig to ever roll around Texas, they are also a texas company.
I am an ultra high pressure (40K PSI) water blaster operator. Make sure you have a filter and valve at the tank outlet so you can shit water off right at tank and if any dirt or other H2O crud Is in the tank it gets filtered out before it lines your plumbing and/or damages your pump. Plus then you can disconnect line at valve and clean the tank. Also, don’t store water in the tank/pump/lines and let it be stagnant for days and weeks on end or bacteria and other corrosion will occur throughout your system
He literally has a firetruck now just imagine this upcoming 4th of july lol
nah we're wating for the new year when he burns 3k tree's with napalm
mad seeker... my thought exactly. Christmas Tree fires. No problem!
What you’re thinking of is called a Booster Reel! It’s a hard rubber hose that is rolled on a rack and is meant for wild land firefighting!
or a normal "household" fire hose, normally 3/4" but 1" is not that special...
Matt, I really hope you see this. I worked as a wildland firefighter and all of our trucks had a centrifugal pump mounted on the back end of the bed so you could have direct plumbing. Get a pump that has an electric choke & start, it makes it so much easier. Mount your pump either on the back left or the back right, and have your reel next to it.
Couple notes from a firefighter who as also built a few brush fire trucks;
1. have the pump on the drivers side if possible- saves more time than you realize going around the truck
2. as I have seen in the comments here have the valve for the tank on the same side as the pump- again saves more time than you think
3. get a low profile tank with baffles in it- will honestly safe a potential roll over when you are on a hill and the water sloshes around, with the tank half full and no baffles the water can store a lot of energy if you stop or turn quickly
"Turn water on, see bubbles, see leaking, Good Job Matt" killed me
Great idea! I’d turn the tank 180 degrees so the outlet of the tank is straight above the pump- then go through the deck straight into the pump inlet- that way you don’t habe to run around the truck to open the tank valve
And have a manifold to quickly switch between pumping from tank to filling tank or pumping from lake.
If you want to keep the outlet behind the driver so quick to turn on, what about using PVC setup or better, possibly aluminum pipe from tank down through deck instead of the hose? Then connect it directly to pump that way? Could still include master lever for tank to pump in the pipe connection above deck. Or, put the pump on driver's side too so everything is quickly available as soon as exiting the cab. Or, if you want the pump on the right side, two options: 1) turn tank 180° so on same side as the pump or, 2) put a pipe through deck from tank exit then connect hose to it under the deck, then to pump.
Until you did that, if you kept the hose out the left side like now, I would still think aluminum pipe or PVC from tank to hose with connection below deck to keep the hose from catching on brush or trees out the side of the truck.
Dave
Yeah, running around that whole truck would get old quick.
Yea you could throw a 1.5” bulkhead on the bottom of it and hard pipe straight threw the deck with pvc or galvanized
Also a set of hold fasts or tie downs with the tank moved about a foot to 18" back then make simple boxes between tank and cab to hold shovels rakes and other pole type tools
If you're planning on using the bottom part of the T for drafting / filling from your storage tank, you will need a valve to close the top part of the T.
Get a smooth bore nozzle
Get shovels, axes, chainsaws, and rakes. Once you knock the fire down you have to expose the hot stuff in the middle and spray it again.
For what you're doing with it, I think it's a great concept. Thanks for making content!
Matt I once was a member of a volenteer FD in iowa . We used a hose and electric 12 volt reel off of a fuel delivery bulk truck . I think it was 1"" and 1/4 but still worked great for a booster line . We also hard piped a line to the front grill guard and had three twist type garden hose nozzles on there with the fan spray as wide as possible for driving and putting out grass fires . It also worked great for prewetting the area before setting a controlled burn on like a brush pile of grass land . Love watching your videos keep it up .
Demo: "Brandon....so Ive got an idea for my fire truck....."CB Welding COME ON DOOOOOOOWN
AK 50 turret...wait, wrong Brandon.
You could have one of the guys weld you a tank that is flat and coves the whole deck and still have still have room to put stuff up there
filling that tank with a gardenhose reminds me of filling those huge plastic pools that took almost 2 days 😂😂😂
I like it, the flat load area on the back could be useful for so many things, as a Paramedic I can also see a massive advantage if anyone was taken ill or injured, local ems may not be able to get down to the ranch, but you could load them onto the flat deck and get them up to an RV point with ems.
I’d def fit a spray bar under the front bumper for brush/grass fire, but also to the back, you can then use it for ‘wet downs’, for example if your track is really dusty and you have a load of people over, do a wet down run for dust suppression.
I'm thinking Brandon the welder getting a call from his #1 customer. Now there's a firetruck we can get a epic bonfire to make up for last 2 years
Matt is definitely going to start fires on purpose so that he can use his new toy😂😂
If he doesn't, I will be disappointed.
Did he ever get a new flamethrower after he ran the old one over? I can’t remember.
Build valve headers in tool box with in/outlets behind cover, It's a fire truck you wont have time to be crawling around under the truck swapping hoses around and it keeps the critters/crap out of pump. Inlet header 2 tees and valves; tank and suction (get matching hardware for your rain tank bottom and well heads). Outlet header 3 tees and valves; 1-1/2" out for long line, 1-1/2" recirculation back to tank top for fill/line pressure control, and 1" for hose reel.
Now that you’ve got all the space on the back you need to get tools. Firefighting is more than just water, you’ll need shovels, rakes, chainsaws, fire beaters, etc. The baffling is crucial, you need that! And a way to recirculate the water so the pump doesn’t explode! And get yourself some good fireproof overalls, boots and helmet or something and leave them in the truck!
Matt!! im so glad you liked my idea to make a shelf under the bed for the pump! Now for the fuel... plumb in a fuel line from that unloaded tank down to the pumps gas tank!!
5:03 matt definitely made that sound like his idea not yours lol
Replace the poly tank with a custom welded tank with baffles that’s lower and in the shape of a bench. Two birds 1 tank!
Weight?
@@NV-nu4dt an 8' galvanized stock tank that can hold 700 gallons weighs 170lbs. No lid on that or baffles but its also bigger than he needs. He wouldn't start with a stock tank, but the metal to hold 500 gallons would likely be around 200lbs.
Would be great project for the weld class or you friend
Would be good but it will be staying out side and with water in it. It would rust in 5 years or so unless he puts some kind of spray in liner to keep it from rusting
@@joshualuman9621 make it with aluminum or stainless? Or use an internal bladder and rhino line the outside?
I've built several wildland/structure trucks over the last 30 years. Mount your tank with discharge rear facing with pump on the deck, put a 100 hose lay on one side rear and a real on the other rear side. You can run boxes down each side for hand tools. Put a couple of steps on the rear. Make sure you have a flex line between tank and pump. Any bed twisting or flex will break your supply from tank to pump. Hard lessons learned many years ago. Hope this helps.
Hey Matt,
I've been a Fire fighter for 18 years in Germany now. On the front of the nozzle there should be a knob. Make sure that knob ist pointing up when you put out a fire. The nozzle now sprays at an angle with more drops in it. More drops mean the water has more surface area and that makes putting out fires more effective. Plus you don't pew burning stuff everywhere and start new fires.
My girlfriend wanted me to ask if you and the Bunker Boys are gonna be making one of those fireman calendars. She's not my girlfriend anymore.
She's better off without you. If your girl asks that question, you should be just as intrigued 🤣
@@LPJMagicmusic I didn't say I dumped her, but thanks for your kind words.
@@mikesheahan6906 I understand it was a joke so I added to it. Weren't you insinuating that you left her because she asked that question?
She’s not your girlfriend anymore... she’s your wife
@@LPJMagicmusic Could just be she took one look at me after dreaming about that calendar, and the rest is history.
the "ain't nobody got time for that" is the gift that keeps on giving.
Gif....
@@stevonic719 not a gif. People need to stop referring to videos as gif. no relation.
Next he will get some Jaws of life just for fun 😂😂😂
Oh lord, there’s a fire!
@@scythelord Oh lord.... Seriously? You ACTUALLY took time to post that? Come out of the basement, its spring time. Lmao
Explaining his purchase to his wife: It’s a fire truck to protect our property from fires.
Mats real motivation : It’s a dooms day supply carrier
I'm liking all your ideas. It's really coming together. As far as your hose reel goes...have it mounted on one of the back corners of the truck. And make it pivot but lock. It can swing inside the bed frame for storage and during transport. But when in use it can swing out hanging over the back end and able to spoil out however far you want. And definitely need to baffle your water tank somehow. Still a good idea. With the tank filling be an issue. But when its half full during transport, your gonna feel that water slosh around.
MATT one thing you might need is a foam pump, im in the rural fire brigade in australia, and our trucks have specific foam pumps that smother the fire and prevent it from smoldering as much. it might also be useful to have a door/box on the side of your truck which contain rakes, shovels, drip torches, axes, as well as a fridge containing drinks, in australia its mandatory that the trucks have drinks to stop heatstroke and dehydration.
thank you sir i’m not in australia but thank your for helping people
Foam is always good, but if he doesn't want to have a separate tank and foam midget go with a ProPak. We use them for smaller fires and they work great, we have 550 gallons of foam on a trailer, but those are for fuel tankers.
Correct me if I’m wrong but I’m pretty the foam pump you talk about isn’t a separate pump but a foam system plumbed into the main pump, with a valve/switch to release foam liquid into the pump.
Only issue for Matt is, is that foam retardant like that is super expensive and buying specific equipment for that would no be practical and then he has to have special training on how to properly utilize that setup. But yes, everything else suggested is a great idea.
@@morgansmith5250 our trucks have small 15Litre foam tub, and at the flick of a switch a pump will pump it into the main hose line while still pumping the water into that same line, normally the high pressure line since we use that alot, and as the hose is used the foam mixes with the water and is sprayed out as one, his truck does have the capabilities on this setup as his truck is bigger than our rural fire brigade trucks, but i understand if he doesnt want to impliment this system
“Ain’t nobody got time for that” I was dead asf😂💀💀
Matt, guys with experience said you need a water tank with BAFFLES inside it so you don't have 4500 lbs of water trying to toss your truck around and tip it over on hilly terrain or corners. It was also strongly recommended that you plumb in a bypass/return line from the pump so when you are NOT spraying water the pump is not constantly working when the engine is running, or you'll burn it up. And, your truck's transport pins are still in...you need to take them out for driving it around.
some things you need are
fire suit
fire blanket
hazard lights
tools
extra gas and diesel
extra hosing
propper mounts for the tank and pump and for the pump make it a box so nothing get all broken or as a heat shield
air horn if you dont have one
ladders
Small note: You will have a pressure drop for every additional elbow you stick in that feed line.
Two forty-five elbows or a large radius ninety might mitigate that somewhat.
That short of a feed line with 2” line and the elevation will be no issue with 4 90degree elbows.
short 2" line feeding a 1" hose, not sure he can get enough elbows to make a significant difference...
Only by about 0.55 of a foot
not that much
It’s more the flow rate than the pressure but don’t think he will really notice to much
Hey Matt! If you’re cutting a hole eventually! You should flip the tank have it fill straight into the pump. Cut a hole on the side of which your pump is so you eliminate the problems of having much more sq inches of pvc. Less surface area less area for concern! If you decide to hard pipe with black iron or something no worries there! You can also run the hose reel on the same side! It just seems like a much simpler route! It keeps you from running everywhere! Three steps physically and in theory. Open tank start pump grab reel all in arms length! Also have Brandon weld some picking eyes on the other side of the tank so you can strap better!!! Or just make bracket/box out of steel!
I realy hope he sees this i hate the way it is facing lol...
I work with chemical spraying and we have a hose reel that has an electric motor to reel it back up
I'd move the tank back to center it on the gap in the rails, and put your hose reel in front of it on the pump side, then put a box on the other side with a door you can access from the side. You can put your spare hose, shovels, fire axe, etc... in there. Then you have most of the deck left for other stuff.
Also, would consider welding angle down to hold the base of the reservoir, in addition to anchor straps.
A WAY TO RECIRCULATE THE WATER WHEN NOT USING IT so that the pump doesn't suffer much
Matt, turn the tank so it faces the pump side. Put a hard line from the tank to the pump. Keep everything you need on one side of the truck. You don't want to be running around the truck because you forgot to turn the water valve from off to open.
Switch the side the pump is on so he can jump out of the driver's side and start it immediately
The pass-through under the bed of the truck looks like it was for storing three ladders or ramps.
I'm a firefighter in rural Ohio and I think you're on the right track. Definitely get the 1" booster reel and some way to draft with hard suction. If you ever do need to draft make sure you get an intake strainer so you don't get all the dirt and sediment inside your pump. I think everyone in the comments are saying the same things really, so you're hitting all the major areas.
Still need to rig a bypass so that when the pump is running and you close the nozzle you don't destroy your pump head, it allows the water to run back to the tank from the pump
Take the rig by your local fire department and let them evaluate it and give you some suggestions for improvement.
mounts a 6x6 across the back of the tank to the bed. Attach tie downs throught the timber to the bed. Use that to keep the tank from sliding and straps (maybe 3 4" wide ) from back timber to front cage. 'hang' reel by pump and attach 2nd reel at rear of vehicle on the bed.
Just a FYI Matt, the more 90°s and turns you out into your pump system you will loose about 5% per 90°and 2% per turn of WPSI.
"if it explodes it explodes ill just get something better" best quote in this vid hands down lol
Hey Matt - look for RV generator slide out trays. They fit under RVs to hold generators bigger than that pump, and slide out to access. Exactly what you need.
You could get some fire fighting wetting agent that will increase the efficacy of your water to penetrate the grass/brush and help your water tanks supply last longer.
move the tank back enough to put your hose reel and a “Maddydale” hose lay between the tank and the cab
That 420 reference was hilarious 'it means nothing to me just found it funny'
Can confirm, it's funny!
4:20 on 4-20.. Means nothing though. Riiiiiiight 😂👌
Was definitely funny 😂
4/20 is also hitlers birthday lol
My dad used to build big tank trucks for leasing to the forest service. He used old dump trucks, swans refrigerator trucks and stuff like that. Very similar to what your doing. My suggestion would be to have an external gas tank for the pump, baffles in the water tank like you said, fire extinguishers on the truck (pumps and other things can and will catch fire), and a cut off near the pump for the water.
When you weld up brackets for the pump weld up a bracket for that tank with mounting rings for your ratchet straps. Learn to accordion fold your hose to prevent kinking when you pull it off the truck.
The one inch hose will definitely give you more than 10 min of firefighting
@Baum Squad lmfao. Figured if I read further down the list of comments that I would find something like this.
Who would have thought decreasing the gpm by 1/3-1/2 would increase the amount of time the water lasts.
Could see if the fellas at CB welding would be up for welding up a lower profile tank with baffles for you! Also... Roof mounted canon?
Monitors rock
Definitely roof mounted water canon, also cute pfp
Yeah I think the lower and wider tank with baffles would be awesome for this truck
Make sure you prime your pumphead and hose when your start drafting from water sources! Also get a one-way foot valve! It’ll help keep prime in your pump when you fill the hose and pump head 🤙
You NEED an extra tank to fill from. Uphill gravity feed option with a 3-4" line with valve on the end in your fill area. The extra tank could even be filled from your rain water system with the loading spot down hill from it. Redundancy, and Saves fumbling around with the pump and switching hoses.
If you're worried about weight distribution you could probably take it to a weigh station. They'll usually be able to tell you how much weight is on each axle.
Don't even have to go to a weigh station can go to a truck stop that has a cat scale
@@denisking6799 you beat me to it. lol. for $12.50 you can find out exactly how your weight is distributed.
Matt, I'm not a firefighter but do have experience with rushed situations in the lifeguard I don't think you want to be running around your truck to turn on the water when you have a fire to put out I would want it on the same side as my pump
He does have to get out on that side already but he could just leave the tank valve open and put one at the pump.
Matt should make the pump be on rails or like a industrial strength drawer slides that can lock in place. That way he can pull up to the fire slide out the pump quick attach the water lines and spray down the fire. Then when the fire is finished he can quickly detach the pump which is why he bought the quick connect quick detach fittings and slide the pump back underneath the truck bed. Then he could do anything he will need to do with the pump like refilling it with fuel and put it back safe in seconds.
You might also want to get some firefighting PPE. Like a jacket, pants, boots, helmet, gloves and goggles. Just a few things to keep in the truck in case you need it.
I like you didn't mention a shirt. He won't need a shirt, just the pants and jacket undone. Maybe some olive oil to protect his chest! =D
For me, would probably turn the tank around so the outflow valve is right above the pump, that way in an emergency you don't have to walk around the truck to open the valve then walk back around to get everything primed and started. It would all be right there on one side. But that's just me.
I was going to comment the same thing.
Seems rather logical, was just wondering why he put it the other way.
I agree having it on the same side makes more sense, but the way it is he could turn on the valve as he gets out of the truck since it's on the drivers side then run to the pump.
Looks mint, personally I’m all about the weight over the axle. Hose reel would be slick, with that extra space on the bed a possible mounted water cannon like an anti aircraft gun with the seat would be a deadly combo. You have to mount a water cannon it only makes sense