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Posted: Mar 24, 2021

The Villages (FL) Receives New $1 Million Fire Truck

According to a report from The Villages Daily Sun, The Villages Public Safety Department (VPS) Chief Edmund Cain announced that he and his crew will soon put into service a new $1 million fire truck featuring a ladder capable of reaching the roof of a 10-story building.

The new truck offers VPS the capability to easily reach the top of the tallest structures in The Villages, which includes the Brownwood Hotel & Spa and Freedom Pointe at The Villages.

Cain said that one main reason VPS wanted this new equipment was to help improve the department’s grade from the Insurance Services Office, whose rating is based on four factors: the fire department’s capabilities, its emergency communications system, its available water supply, and risk reduction.

The post The Villages (FL) Receives New $1 Million Fire Truck appeared first on Fire Apparatus.

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Posted: Mar 24, 2021

Photos: SPAAMFAA Winter Conference in York (PA)

Photographer Dave Traiforos offers these pictures from the recent Society for the Preservation and Appreciation of Antique Motor Fire Apparatus in America conference held in York, Pennsylvania, from March 10-13, 2021.

Posted: Mar 24, 2021

Photo of the Day: March 24, 2021

KME—Orange County (CA) Fire Authority tactical tender. Freightliner M2 106 4×2 cab and chassis; Darley JMP 500-gpm pump; 2,000-gallon polypropylene water tank; 20-gallon foam cell; FoamPro 2001 single-agent foam system; TFT Tornado bumper turret designed to operate at pressures up to 500 gpm to aid in rapid fire extinguishment. Dealer: Brandon Gomez, REV Fire Group California.

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The post Photo of the Day: March 24, 2021 appeared first on Fire Apparatus.

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Posted: Mar 24, 2021

Photo of the Day: March 24, 2021

KME—Orange County (CA) Fire Authority tactical tender. Freightliner M2 106 4×2 cab and chassis; Darley JMP 500-gpm pump; 2,000-gallon polypropylene water tank; 20-gallon foam cell; FoamPro 2001 single-agent foam system; TFT Tornado bumper turret designed to operate at pressures up to 500 gpm to aid in rapid fire extinguishment. Dealer: Brandon Gomez, REV Fire Group California.

MORE FIRE APPARATUS ARTICLES>>

The post Photo of the Day: March 24, 2021 appeared first on Fire Apparatus.

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Posted: Mar 24, 2021

Rosenbauer Delivers Seven Apparatus to Navajo Nation (AZ) Fire and Rescue Services

By Alan M. Petrillo

Navajo Nation (AZ) Fire and Rescue Services (NNFRS) covers an area of 27 square miles (17.5 million acres), roughly the size of the state of West Virginia, encompassing land in three Western States: Arizona, Utah, and New Mexico.

The Navajo Nation has eight fire districts in its territory including Arizona-based stations in Window Rock, Fort Defiance, Tuba City, Chinle, and Twin Arrows, and New Mexico-based stations in Shiprock, Newcomb, and Ojo Amarillo.

Each Timberwolf wildland urban interface pumper built by Rosenbauer is on a Freightliner M2-106 four-door 4×4 chassis and cab, powered by a 350-hp Cummins L9 diesel engine, and an Allison 3000 EVS automatic transmission, with a Rosenbauer NH 1,250-gpm pump, a 1,000-gallon polypropylene water tank, and a 30-gallon foam cell.
(Photo courtesy of Navajo Nation Fire and Rescue Services.)

NNFRS Chief Larry Chee said he was faced with delivering fire protection, technical rescue, hazardous materials response, and emergency medical services (EMS) to the Navajo Nation with an aging fleet of hodgepodge vehicles. When the Nation’s Division of Motor Vehicles decided to purchase new fire vehicles, he became immersed in the specifications process with the division.

“Sometimes, it takes 45 minutes to get to an emergency scene,” Chee points out, “because of distance and the fact that about 70 percent of our roads are not paved, graveled, or maintained regularly. Often, our calls are in remote mountain or desert areas, with a lot of structure fire calls way off the highway. We have four seasons in the Nation, and 80 percent of our district is off the grid, so we have to make sure our fire vehicles can handle the terrain, which is why we went with four-wheel drive on all of our new fire trucks.”

Mike Todd, fire apparatus sales engineer for Velocity Fire Equipment, says NNFRS met with Velocity sales staff and were impressed with the Rosenbauer Avenger chassis. “Their eyes lit up when they saw the Avenger,” Todd says. “Although it’s a very modern design, it’s the right fit for the Nation, which had been running very basic commercial chassis and cab pumpers with no frills.”

The Navajo Nation had Rosenbauer build three Avenger four-wheel drive rescue-pumpers and four four-wheel drive Timberwolf pumpers, which are designed to meet the requirements of a Type 1 structural pumper and a Type 3 off-road wildland engine.

Each Avenger rescue-pumper is powered by a 450-horsepower (hp) Cummins L9 diesel engine and an Allison 3000 EVS automatic transmission. Features include a Rosenbauer NH 1,250-gallons per minute (gpm) pump, a 900-gallon polypropylene water tank, a 30-gallon foam cell, and a Task Force Tips Monsoon deck gun. The wheelbase on each Avenger is 215 inches; the overall length is 34 feet, 4 inches; and the overall height is 10 feet, 10 inches.

Each Timberwolf wildland urban interface pumper built by Rosenbauer is on a Freightliner M2-106 four-door 4×4 chassis and cab, powered by a 35
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