dose any one else ride on the buper what do you think a bout it do you think it works beter that whaking on the fire ground
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Originally posted by cbblood View Postdose any one else ride on the buper what do you think a bout it do you think it works beter that whaking on the fire ground
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Originally posted by cbblood View Postdose any one else ride on the buper what do you think a bout it do you think it works beter that whaking on the fire ground
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My old department's Jeeps were rigged with a tee on the pump discharge side so the guy in the shotgun seat could spray water without leaving the safety of the roll cage.
Anyone caught riding the bumper of anything got a cruel and unusual punishment:no responding for two weeks and no invite to the Christmas dinner.Since the points checks were paid then,we tried to avoid that sentence.
Further offences could result in the death penalty,literally or in that they'd be booted off the department and not able to rejoin.
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Originally posted by cbblood View Postdose any one else ride on the buper what do you think a bout it do you think it works beter that whaking on the fire groundStay Safe and Well Out There....
Always remembering 9-11-2001 and 343+ Brothers
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Kinda hard to walk and drag hose on a 1000 acre+ sized fire, for 3 days. As far as riding on the front bumper, I hate the idea, it is a bad idea. Riding on the App. on the other hand is, in my area, a neccisity. There have been advancments to make it safer but it will never be completly safe.
The jeep idea is a great idea but, can you stuff 400 gallons of water, all of the tools and equpiment, and a 3 man crew for a full blown type 5 rig? Have heard of dragin' the hose in the cab with you, but i dunno how well that would work.
Deck-guns, are almost 2 exspensive to fully out-fit a complete fleet of grass rigs with. I have also seen deck-guns get the **** beat out of them in heavy brush to.
I will post some pictures, of what we have done to help out with that, not sayin that we are the do-all end-all to everything but I think Its a Good idea.Courage, Being Scared to Death and Saddling Up anyways.
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Riding bumpers is a very, very, very bad idea. Not the way that I want to go out.
We have a nice set up. Our county district is all fields and scab-rock range land. Our county engies are built on heavy chassis, 4x4, carry 1,000 gallons of water and a foam injection sytem, and have a seperate 4 cylinder pump engine independent of the drive engine. We ride up top on the fires, our floor being the top of the tank. We have 3 1/2 foot padded sidewalls all around our working area, with nozzles mounted on swivels for ease of control. We have control of the pump throttle from where we stand. I'll get some pics and try to get them posted tomorrow.I get to play with firetrucks, what more can I say?
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Originally posted by Bushwhacker View PostHave heard of dragin' the hose in the cab with you, but i dunno how well that would work.
I've done that many times, we're a small volunteer dept. and sometimes weekday response is 2-3 guys, I lay the nozzle over the mirror bracket and just aim and shoot
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Originally posted by Bushwhacker View PostKinda hard to walk and drag hose on a 1000 acre+ sized fire, for 3 days. As far as riding on the front bumper, I hate the idea, it is a bad idea. Riding on the App. on the other hand is, in my area, a neccisity. There have been advancments to make it safer but it will never be completly safe.
The jeep idea is a great idea but, can you stuff 400 gallons of water, all of the tools and equpiment, and a 3 man crew for a full blown type 5 rig? Have heard of dragin' the hose in the cab with you, but i dunno how well that would work.
Deck-guns, are almost 2 exspensive to fully out-fit a complete fleet of grass rigs with. I have also seen deck-guns get the **** beat out of them in heavy brush to.
I will post some pictures, of what we have done to help out with that, not sayin that we are the do-all end-all to everything but I think Its a Good idea.
crews with indian pumps, flails, rakes, leaf blowers, etc.
We also use 5/4 ton trucks with 100-200 gallon tanks. CAFS can make that water stretch much longer, meaning lower consumption. Hell, Joy in the water tank makes for lower consumption.
I have worked many a wildland fire using the hose stretched up to the window.
I am not saying that my solutions work everywhere, but I am saying that
riding the bumper is nuts, and should be outlawed.
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Originally posted by RitzvilleFD View PostRiding bumpers is a very, very, very bad idea. Not the way that I want to go out.
We have a nice set up. Our county district is all fields and scab-rock range land. Our county engies are built on heavy chassis, 4x4, carry 1,000 gallons of water and a foam injection sytem, and have a seperate 4 cylinder pump engine independent of the drive engine. We ride up top on the fires, our floor being the top of the tank. We have 3 1/2 foot padded sidewalls all around our working area, with nozzles mounted on swivels for ease of control. We have control of the pump throttle from where we stand. I'll get some pics and try to get them posted tomorrow.
Our newer rigs have that setup where you are up on top of the tank just behind the cab with a padded enclosure. Its a lot better than riding on the rear end strapped into the cage.
Last edited by k1500chevy97; 01-18-2007, 02:06 AM.
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riding the buper
Originally posted by k1500chevy97 View PostOur newer rigs have that setup where you are up on top of the tank just behind the cab with a padded enclosure. Its a lot better than riding on the rear end strapped into the cage.
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