Transitional Fire Attack! Heavy Fire in a 3 Story Tax Payer with Exposure - Critique

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  • Опубликовано: 11 дек 2024

Комментарии • 108

  • @kennethvines5367
    @kennethvines5367 Год назад +20

    You are absolutely 100% correct, the longer you wait to put water on it the more the structure is compromised. The deck gun is the most unutilized tool in the fire service. The sad thing is most departments don't understand the importance of the deck gun until it's too late.

  • @Firemedic2547
    @Firemedic2547 Год назад +3

    Another good video. Not much I can add that hasn't already been said by others commenting. I will say I am pleased to see so many people agreeing that this is a deck gun/exterior (initially) job. We all need to remember that the supply line is important but it is not the MOST important. The most important tactic here is to get the fastest water possible on the fire and that is by the deck gun with the booster tank. You will knock down a tremendous amount of fire with a 500 gpm deck gun with a solid tip nozzle and even if you only flow 30 seconds of water onto the fire you will knock down a tremendous amount of fire and still have half a tank left for an interior stretch. Best tip I can offer here is to make sure you don't waste a drop of water so don't open the deck gun until its set up and ready to flow water. Do yourselves a favor and put a gate valve on your deck gun so it can be opened and closed by the person on top of the engine that's operating the appliance.

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад

      Great point! 👩🏻‍🚒🔥🔥🔥🔥👩🏻‍🚒💦

  • @CallsItLikeISeizeIts
    @CallsItLikeISeizeIts Год назад +4

    YES! NIST, everyone needs to review those findings, first time scientists looks into fire services tactics to study and record the effects on the fire and had film and monitors on everything, putting water from exterior early reduces temperatures and fire spread significantly as well as the survivability of structure, occupants and fire personnel.The video and gauges don’t lie. you should go over all the NIST tapes on this channel to open everyone’s aperture if ya haven’t already. Change is hard but the evidence is pretty clear.

  • @ericlevine3885
    @ericlevine3885 Год назад +7

    This is a classic blitz attack with a master stream. Especially with minimal manpower at a very crucial time in the fire. Water needs to be put on this fire NOW! With exposures on both sides, time is of the essence. This is not to say, if my career department with 29 personnel rolled up, this would probably be an AGRESSIVE interior attack with multiple lines stretched. The crews would have to show significant progress pretty quickly or master streams would be put into service. Lines would be advanced to the exposures by second alarm companies. All with in the first 8-10 minutes. That is not what you have here. Overall a good stop considering the potential for a small town disaster.

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад

      👍👍👍👩🏻‍🚒👩🏻‍🚒👩🏻‍🚒🔥🔥🔥👍👍👍

  • @bm9869
    @bm9869 Год назад +11

    This is my hometown and I was on this first arriving engine, couple things here….the deck gun was utilized before the handline was charged and a good amount of fire was knocked down..one of our issues we run into is water supply. The closest hydrant was on a backstreet so it took a few minutes for a water supply to be established. The thought on the handline being pulled was to be in position to put water on fire inside the moment a water supply was secured. With this being a small town with all home response volunteers we were the only engine on scene for the first 4-5 minutes. When the water supply was established the handline inside was able to attack the fire from the fire floor. The fire was contained to the initial fire building and the 3rd and 4th of the delta 1 exposure. Our ladder truck was OOS for maintenance so our closest truck was coming from about 15 minutes away, which could’ve greatly helped the situation if we had a truck there with the first engine. I’m free to talk about this more if you wish. You’ve brought up many great points and for the little manpower we had at the ready upon initial arrival the fire was knocked down fairly quick and prevented a substantially larger fire

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад +2

      I really appreciate the info. Very helpful and fills in a ton of gaps. Why is the video cut up? Would have been fantastic to see the initial aspects of the extinguishment. 🔥🔥🔥👩🏻‍🚒👩🏻‍🚒👩🏻‍🚒👍👍👍

    • @bm9869
      @bm9869 Год назад +2

      @@TransmitThe1075 I am not sure why the video was cut up since I was not the one who made the video, I can say that the progression of the fire after the beginning of the video to our arrival was only 2-3 minutes in time. I had to pass the fire to get to our station. The deck gun was utilized first using the 750 gallons of tank water and the handline was charged immediately after.

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад

      Ok thanks. If you find a full version. I’d love to post and do a part 2. Thanks again.

    • @Firemedic2547
      @Firemedic2547 Год назад +1

      @@bm9869 Great info. Would also love to have seen the unedited video. Sounds like you guys used the best possible tactics considering available resources

    • @willlock3644
      @willlock3644 10 месяцев назад

      @@bm9869never pass the fire man. Never.

  • @LUVEMDPOWER
    @LUVEMDPOWER Год назад +3

    Completely agree - that fire was screaming 'Deck Gun me!'

  • @jerryhughes5380
    @jerryhughes5380 3 дня назад

    “Taxpayer” is a slang term that originated in FDNY to describe a commercial storefront fire with or without residential occupancies above. The term that should be used to avoid confusion is Mixed Occupancy.

  • @kevinrichards1539
    @kevinrichards1539 4 месяца назад

    I was in a department not to far outside the city from 92-97. Fairly busy with some good work.
    We 100% believed "real" fireman get to the seat of the fire. Deck gun got lots of use on the dumpsters, and when saving the basement.
    You also rarely were masked up during overhaul.
    But never at a house fire that clearly had tenable areas was that deck gun used. .
    The god honest belief was you were pushing the fire into those tenable areas. Lowing the chance of survivability.
    Appreciate the videos.

  • @dennispatrick7158
    @dennispatrick7158 Год назад +8

    For 25 years I was a Federal Agent but in town I lived they had a mostly full time career FD augmented by about 10 "call firefighters" and I was one of the call FFs.
    When I was "hired" as a call FF, the FD had a whacky Deputy Fire Chief. He was a very nice man but had some very quirky personality issues and he was loved by some and hated by others. As the Deputy Chief he was responsible for training which didn't happen often but when it did he was fun to be around. He hammered, I mean hammered that if the FD apparatus rolled up to a 'barn burner' as he called them, he always wanted to deck gun to be put into operation as soon the truck stopped. Next thing was, always look for a hydrant on the way in and when someone saw one, call it out and have someone ready themselves to grab it and drop a supply line, then proceed to the fire. Once in front of the fire building, again, he wanted someone to man the deck gun and the chauffeur start putting tank water into the deck gun. While this was going on, the hydrant was being dressed and getting ready for water as quickly as possible.
    He may have been, and he was, a strange dude but he believed in two things, the wet stuff on the hot stuff ASAP and a building can be rebuilt but a FF life can not be.
    So in closing, I will always remember him saying, deck gun, deck gun and deck gun. And it is such a simple, yet highly effective way of fighting a fire like the one in this video.
    I honestly wish more fire departments would do this as a usual practice when confronted with a fire like this one.
    Just my humble opinion developed by good trainer.

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад +1

      Thanks for the story and the comments.

    • @CallsItLikeISeizeIts
      @CallsItLikeISeizeIts Год назад +3

      ‘ No sir, we don’t want the big bombs, those little ones will do “ said no soldier ever😂

  • @jerryhughes5380
    @jerryhughes5380 3 дня назад

    In 2017 ULFSRI published a research paper on the application of exterior fire streams and found that fire streams applied to openings such as windows from the outside entrain a large volume of air and oxygen. They determined that the father away the nozzle is from an outside opening the higher the CFM of air entrainment. Air volumes as high as 15,000 CFM of air and O2 were observed. This means that the Deck Gun entrains the most air and oxygen into the structure which increases the production of expanding steam, smoke and fire gasses. 10-75 only mentions the need to cool the fire by using a deck gun without acknowledging the smoke spread problem that it causes on the inside where trapped occupants are trying to breathe. Cooling the flames so they darken down enough to stop flame spread helps firefighters enter the structure so they can use a charged hose line to extinguish the interior safely, but provides little concern for the safety of occupants who are subjected to a rapid increase in the production of smoke. Water has high surface tension which prevents it from penetrating beneath the surface of burning materials which leads to toxic steam production resulting in smoke inhalation, injury and CIVILIAN fire deaths. The best possible tactic to deploy on this job is to add surfactant (Class A foam concentrate) to the water in a charged hose line which will lower the surface tension of the water. Lowering the surface tension of water increases the penetration of water and reduces smoke production as it extinguishes the fire 3 to 5 times more effectively than plain untreated water.
    Save the Deck Gun for your next lumber yard fire, not your next occupied residential fire.
    Chief Hughes
    Battalion 1 (retired)
    Chicago FD

  • @brianrobinson9602
    @brianrobinson9602 Год назад +4

    In my experience as a volunteer and paid FF, for some reason many companies due not roll their ladder first or even second due, they rarely deploy their deck guns and even more rarely will pull a 2 1/2 line. Large fire, large water, with the proper nozzle you can add an 1 3/4 to the end of a 2 1/2 line for mop up etc. Deck gun should have been the first call while establishing water supply, command should have requested 2 ladders and a FAST team from mutual aid if needed. it appears there are Mutual aid companies on the first due sheet as there are both black and tan turn out gear on scene.

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад +1

      Thanks for info. I think the town area has 2 or 3 firehouses. I suspect each house operates as tits own empire. 😉

  • @shanestamball1886
    @shanestamball1886 Год назад +1

    If any of our chiefs arrived and found that, before we arrive. They will all be screaming big water. And depending upon what side of town we are on, we've been second engine in multiple times, and ordered to deploy the tank through deckgun when there is a exposure issue such as this.which is very common in my area. Rows here are typically built on elevated slopes, and when there's wind involved, it's a no brainer. Burning down entire blocks should be a thing of the past , considering the flow volumes of today's equipment.

  • @quranfrazier157
    @quranfrazier157 9 месяцев назад +2

    There definitely should've been a transitional attack with some sort of heavy water (2.5, Deck Gun, Blitz, etc) and a line going immediately to the exposure as well.

  • @snugglylovemuffin
    @snugglylovemuffin 11 месяцев назад +1

    First thoughts were "deck gun" but it has to be coordinated with water supply. Theoretically there should be a hydrant nearby, but in some of these smaller, and frankly poorer communities, that rely heavily on volunteers, hydrantsay be broken or underpressured.
    A lot of moving parts, this is why analysis should not tranfser into criticism necessarily

  • @josephmiller4052
    @josephmiller4052 Год назад +4

    Definitely use the Deck gun right off the bat saves time and property. One guy on the deck gun,one guy securing a water source, and one or 2 guys pulling hand lines to make a interior attack. 3 and 4 engine crews. Second engine in hooks up the hydrant 4 or 5 LDH. I was on a combination department.

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад

      👍👍👩🏻‍🚒👩🏻‍🚒🔥🔥

    • @josephmiller4052
      @josephmiller4052 Год назад

      Thanks. I'm from the Chicagoland area's. We had 3 maybe 4 max on a engine or truck company.

  • @robertschwartzman195
    @robertschwartzman195 Год назад +2

    One department on Long Island said they will discontinue using a deck gun. They have been a proven winner in early getting water on the blaze then why stop using them ?

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад

      Maybe they work for a construction company. 🤪

  • @dahinsoncoj
    @dahinsoncoj 17 дней назад

    I guess my initial comment was removed for providing the actual location. It was intended only to allow a follower to do their own due diligence in understanding exactly what the responding department challenges are with regard to the type department, staffing ISO PPC rating, and staffing. Apparatus, equipment, domestic water supply, OSHA mandated health of personnel using SCBA, and most importantly, the level of training, education, certification, and experience of those firefighters, company and chief Officers.
    The gest of my comment being Critical Decision time - lose the building or lose the block. Based on what I observed, the correct plan was selected, executed, and successful in its deployment. Great job, and a tip of the hat!

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  17 дней назад

      Thanks for the comments. For the record, we never remove anything. Either it didn’t work or YT removed it.

  • @josephlacarrubba8219
    @josephlacarrubba8219 Год назад +2

    Deck gun no question about it. Am I looking at 5 or 6 firefighters going through the door and no 2 line pulled?

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад

      The constant pausing and playing of the video, makes things extremely difficult to get proper perspective and context. But yes, a secondhand line would certainly be a good idea.

  • @wbwayne8887
    @wbwayne8887 Год назад +5

    I'm all about the deck gun in this situation, as long as a water supply can be set up in a timely manner. If one isn't readily available, and you blow your wad prematurely, it won't take long before your back to square 1 again.

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад +4

      I didn’t spot a hydrant in this video. However, since it’s downtown, I would have to assume there’s one somewhere. Though, I agree with your concern I still think slowing the trajectory of the fire down, has far more value then regaining water supply quickly. Either the fire needs that much water or it doesn’t, I don’t buy into the saving water mentality.

    • @Firemedic2547
      @Firemedic2547 Год назад +2

      Takes discipline to not exhaust the entire booster tank but remember that GPM is the determining factor in containing this type of fire. The conservation of water is a misplaced priority. But it's possible to do both as I said. Even with a 500 gal booster tank. Officer has to be very specific to the apparatus operator. I want you to open up the deck gun into the top floor and flow water for 30 seconds then shut it down. This should buy adequate time for an interior stretch as well as knock down fire that is extending to the exposure that a crew would not be able to attack by accessing the interior of the original fire building with a handline

    • @wbwayne8887
      @wbwayne8887 Год назад

      @@Firemedic2547
      Exactly, I believe it's called a "blitz attack." Very effective in the right situation and with good water placement.

  • @toddw6716
    @toddw6716 Год назад +3

    Most departments seem to rarly use them. out of sight out of mind

  • @nelsonpena6953
    @nelsonpena6953 Год назад

    I had read a comment / story about a Chicago Fire Officer, don't recall his exact title but with one engine he would attack the fire with a deck gun and hand lines, Era was in the late fifties going into the sixties. Maybe someone knows who I am referring to. He would bark probably will HOLD and keep putting water on the fire.

  • @michaelstump-vx2fr
    @michaelstump-vx2fr Год назад +2

    Absolutely should’ve used the deck gun absolutely

  • @wicksfarm4895
    @wicksfarm4895 Год назад +7

    deck gun

  • @blake3022
    @blake3022 8 месяцев назад

    If a hydrant is close by then could have definitely used the deck gun. Just don’t want to use all your water up without a supply line..

  • @Bobbyd0052
    @Bobbyd0052 Год назад +1

    DECKGUN,DECKGUN !

  • @GMan-yv8cb
    @GMan-yv8cb Год назад +1

    Yes, quick knock-down with a master-stream!
    I think too many times that FFs, Officers, etc, were taught (or believe) that master-streams on 'big fire' will increase temps, (STEAM) and hurt/kill any occupants!

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад

      Exactly

    • @captainotto
      @captainotto Год назад

      That's a strange conclusion to make. That steam is sucking away the heat and starving the fire of oxygen. It's also creating a net reduction in fire gas. If a building's occupants are going to be hurt by the steam, then they're probably already dead by the fire gas.
      I wonder what sort of events or conditions led to that conclusion and further led to that conclusion becoming a tradition.

    • @GMan-yv8cb
      @GMan-yv8cb Год назад +2

      @captainotto
      Training and 'war stories' from academy instructors and 'old' timers.
      AND... a neighboring Dept advancing a handline to floor 2 of a moderately-involved attached taxpayer.
      The Engine crew opened up unaware(?) of location of primary search team. Nobody died, but many lengthy stays in the Burn Unit!
      I AM NOT BLAMING ANYONE (engine crew, search crew, Co. Officers, Command, etc). The crews involved and the investigation know exactly what happened (tactics, strategies, operations, communications, etc)
      I was not on-scene or involved in the firefight.
      This is ALL from news media and anecdotal, on-scene accounts.
      Water+Fire=Steam

  • @perryfire3006
    @perryfire3006 Год назад +1

    When I started out you would get reprimanded for spraying any water from the outside. You approached from the unburned to the burned no matter how hard. Thank goodness times have changed and transitional fire attacks are accepted now.
    This would have been a great opportunity to use an elevated master stream if one was available. With the higher exposure that fire needed to be knocked down quickly. The only hesitation I would have with a deck gun is spraying high as it is very easy to overshoot your target. We've all seen videos of streams watering the back yard.
    I don't know how long it took to put the fire out but the end result wasn't too bad in my opinion considering they were late with the big water. A complete video would have helped a lot.

  • @danmac344
    @danmac344 Год назад

    Introducing exterior hose streams into structures that could be occupied should be done w/ extreme caution; based on the situation, not as a default tactic.
    Exterior hose streams do push hot smoke. I’ve seen and felt it.

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад

      I’d take the risk. With the massive benefits of fire going out, stopping growth and preventing further extension.

    • @danmac344
      @danmac344 Год назад

      @@TransmitThe1075 If there were firefighters just outside the third floor entry door or making entry through the rear, would you still use the deck gun? If your answer is no, then you shouldn’t use the deck gun because there could be civilians in those locations. Locations that may be survivable for a bit- that you’re making worse by using the deck gun. And by delaying entry you’re delaying possible rescue. Civilian life safety is our priority. That building looks like it could be occupied. Interior attack needs to be the default approach for the reason of life safety.
      We’ve all seen fires that look bad until a hose line goes into operation and then the situation gets better fast. I’d get a line to that third floor (checking first and second quickly on way up) and into the exposures asap.

    • @Firemedic2547
      @Firemedic2547 Год назад +2

      @@danmac344 Agree a misapplied exterior line (usually from a fog or combo nozzle on the wrong setting) will entrain a lot of air and can push heat and smoke further into the building

    • @dinkheinzman309
      @dinkheinzman309 Год назад +1

      A straight steam/smooth bore does not push fire, heat, or smoke...Hit the ceiling with it from outside. It's no different than a sprinkler head operating...It comes out as a straight steama and hits the pendant...

  • @rb3715
    @rb3715 7 месяцев назад

    The original video showed several engine mounted deck guns in operation immediately ……. This video has been altered to delete this deluge attack …… perhaps because there was plainly audible arguing over using this tactic ……..a total of three guns were trained on this fire from 1st three engines on scene ……

    • @rb3715
      @rb3715 7 месяцев назад

      This town has seen more than its share of large fires over the years in closely built older rowhomes as well as large buildings in the business district ……

  • @glenndraper5760
    @glenndraper5760 3 месяца назад

    The White Helmet Is Normally For Chiefs That Was The First Person In The Part Of The Video. Yellow Helmets Are Captains And Sometimes Lieutenants Pending On Department Protocol. 🇺🇸😊😎🤗

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  2 месяца назад

      I completely agree, but I’ve seen everything. Particularly with small rural departments.

  • @MNGuitars
    @MNGuitars Год назад

    As long as there is a water supply to that first engine this is an obvious deck gun first fire, that amount of fire coupled with attached exposures is a no brainer, stretch your soon to be interior 1 3/4 hand line and hook up your supply line while that deck gun is flowing

  • @daver681
    @daver681 Год назад

    Where is this actual video

  • @Bobbyd0052
    @Bobbyd0052 Год назад

    CHEERS TO THE VOLUNTEERS !

  • @rescueboss
    @rescueboss Год назад

    I seen the uncut video why they cut it I am not sure but they did Deck Gun It before that line went in. Their are other videos but no one has that initial but their is a 2nd video from ruclips.net/video/DsvD7mbfw04/видео.html but its little after they arrived and you can see deck gun in operation. If I am not mistaken the news and other reports was this was 3 story vacant. Buildings on both sides was occupied.

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад

      Thanks for linking this video, it seems to me the deck is later on in the incident. Which is fine, but I suspect would’ve been better initially. Would be great if the original poster, posted the entire thing un edited.

    • @rescueboss
      @rescueboss Год назад

      @@TransmitThe1075 100 percent agree. Video being edited might be because of people question tactics but if I can find any others I will share. I can not tell from the picture on the type of outside covering but in this area of PA we have gasoline shingles or siding. Many older houses and building use this so not sure if that would be part of that. The first due ladder on that fire was Mt Carmel which is from another county away. If you have other questions let me know as I live in the county where this occured.

    • @rescueboss
      @rescueboss Год назад

      @@TransmitThe1075 found the uncut but not sure if you need to be member to access it on another platform.

  • @Sonic-sh2vh
    @Sonic-sh2vh Год назад

    I don't know why that this isn't basic protocol .

  • @dennisa.brinck5988
    @dennisa.brinck5988 Год назад +2

    You really enjoy listening to your voice....we've heard you more than we have seen footage.....

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад +2

      Yes, that’s why these are called fire critiques. If you want to just watch fire incidents live 99.9% of all the other videos are just that, I suggest you seek those. There is a segment of firefighters here that want to discuss, critique and learn via discussion.

  • @chiefskip8093
    @chiefskip8093 Год назад

    Big fire ,big water

  • @rickhartzell1708
    @rickhartzell1708 Год назад +2

    im a past chief and i would have iniated a deck gun operation while hand lines were being played out

  • @ccc530
    @ccc530 Год назад

    Deck gun. Elevated master streams. First.

  • @jefflewis6412
    @jefflewis6412 Год назад

    I’m not a fire fighter, but I think a deck gun could have helped here.

  • @azul8811
    @azul8811 Год назад +1

    This is not a “Taxpayer.”

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад +1

      Please explain.

    • @azul8811
      @azul8811 Год назад +3

      @@TransmitThe1075 I believe that the term originated in NYC. The FDNY has used the term for many years. It had been used in print in their in-house training journal "WNYF" since IDK when. Sometime in either the late 70s or early 80s (I forget exactly) they published a rather long bulletin entitled FIREFIGHTING PROCEDURES, TAXPAYER FIRES. Here is an excerpt relative to the definition of the term.
      2. DESCRIPTION
      2.1 The term "Taxpayer" is not defined or recognized in the building code. The term
      originally referred to the practice of real estate investors who, while holding land for
      speculation, resorted to minimal investment in construction to produce income to offset
      the cost of taxes. These structures were usually of cheap and flimsy construction with
      little or no fire retarding features.
      2.1.1 Supermarkets and one-story shopping centers of more recent construction do not
      fit the above description but contain many of the inherent hazards associated with
      taxpayers. For the purpose of this book, they shall be considered "taxpayers."
      2.2 A taxpayer building is commonly taken to mean a business structure one or two stories in
      height of Class 3 construction (exterior firewalls with wooden interior structural
      members).
      2.2.1 Their areas vary from 20' x 50' to areas of whole city blocks, the most common
      size being approximately 100' x 100'. They can be built on one or more lots with
      adjoining structures of greater heights on three sides.
      2.2.2 These buildings are usually single structures commonly sheltering from one to as
      many as 15 different businesses with weak non-fire resistive partitions and no fire
      stops in the cocklofts.
      Section 2.3 of the bulletin goes on to state that there are three broad categories of Taxpayers and goes on to describe the differences among them. None of those describe structures as we see in this fire.

    • @azul8811
      @azul8811 Год назад

      @@TransmitThe1075

  • @louisviscardi1501
    @louisviscardi1501 5 месяцев назад

    Bottom line water on the FIRE

  • @chiefskip8093
    @chiefskip8093 Год назад

    Hit it with the deck gun!!

  • @JB91710
    @JB91710 Год назад +2

    Again, this is not brain surgery. You lay in. That's all there is to it. If there are no hydrants, you have onboard water and you should be following up with tankers. You stop, you activate the pump and you deck gun this until the flames are gone. By then you might just have firefighters who are fully dressed so they can pull a line to the front door to go in and surgically apply water to stop the threat completely. If you aren't doing exactly what I said you aren't a real firefighter or department. Everything else is a waste of time and doesn't stop combustion. Which is the JOB of a fire department,

  • @Munter247
    @Munter247 2 месяца назад

    3 story taxpayer???????

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Месяц назад

      Yes, you can have a three-story, defined “taxpayer”.

  • @ToddLOwens
    @ToddLOwens Год назад +1

    This was a recent job in Ashland Borough, Schuylkill County PA. It appears in the link attached that they eventually got some "stangs" running on exposure 1.
    ruclips.net/video/DsvD7mbfw04/видео.html

  • @kc0eks
    @kc0eks Год назад

    Nice big lip smack to open. Wish you tubers used pop filters and or better editing.

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад

      We try to focus on content, and not editing perfection. But I will try to do better.

  • @eriqwinfrey591
    @eriqwinfrey591 Год назад

    Exterior water pushes fire/products of combustion to other unaffected parts of the building/ any potentially trapped occupants

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад +2

      OK, I’m sure there’s some truth to that statement. However, burning hot temperatures, flames and black smoke are also major threats. I don’t think anyone is suggesting there isn’t a risk, but I would suggest the positives greatly outweigh the negatives.

    • @eriqwinfrey591
      @eriqwinfrey591 Год назад

      @@TransmitThe1075 time and place. To me aggressively committing the handline to the interior and pushing the fire out and putting it out is the best option

    • @Firemedic2547
      @Firemedic2547 Год назад +1

      There is a right and wrong way to apply water from the exterior. Must be a solid stream and must be applied at the correct angle. If done right then you don't cause the detrimental effects you mentioned

  • @kennethlang5480
    @kennethlang5480 Год назад +1

    The Firemen with the White Helmet are the officer. The Deck should be used to knock most of the Fire down.

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад

      The two gentlemen in the white helmets at the beginning, appear to be rather old and likely to be in capable of interior, fire fighting. I suspect they are Chiefs not company officers.

  • @leokeichline5200
    @leokeichline5200 Год назад

    yes 100 persent

  • @user-fg9jh8ni1i
    @user-fg9jh8ni1i Год назад

    What's your email I want you discuss a tactic?

  • @JB91710
    @JB91710 Год назад

    Getting the job done eventually, doesn't mean the job was done well. This is how you do this JOB! ruclips.net/p/PLkp0E1ao1XEzg384QZ4ovMA_6P7gCY3nJ

    • @TransmitThe1075
      @TransmitThe1075  Год назад

      Fantastic video, thank you so much for sharing.

    • @ALee8456
      @ALee8456 Год назад

      @jb91710 🐔💩