BY BILL ADAMS
It is improbable to impossible for an apparatus purchasing committee (APC) to write a purchasing specification for a custom cab and chassis without interfacing with one of the manufacturers that builds them.
When doing so, APCs usually follow a preferred manufacturer’s specification verbiage verbatim for the quantity, type, and location of a cab’s headlights. Maybe they shouldn’t. They don’t have to.
Because of the correlation between headlight and directional light locations, this article continues the lighting discussion (“Apparatus Purchasing: Front Directional Lights”, Fire Apparatus & Emergency Equipment, March 2019) on custom cabs. Although headlights appear to be an innocuous topic, valid questions and concerns have been raised about them. How do they work? What determines their location? Who determines their location? Why are they so bright? How should they be aligned? Some queries are addressed herein.
The Electric Vehicle Company of Hartford, Connecticut, introduced the first electric headlamp in 1898. In the early 1920s, Massachusetts was one of the first states to require headlamps on all motor vehicles. Major innovations since then include sealed-beam headlights in the late 1930s, halogen lamps in the 1960s, and high-intensity discharge (HID) lamps in the early 1990s, followed shortly thereafter by light emitting diode (LED) technology. HID lamps never really caught on. Because purchasers have become enamored with them and many OEMs offer them as standard equipment, only LEDs are discussed herein. However, it must be pointed out that some vendors may offer halogen headlights as a default standard with an LED option. That may be a cost consideration rather than a performance criterion. Halogen headlights are still effective, legal, and desirable by some purchasers.
SAM MASSA
Sam Massa is the founder, president, and chief technologist of HiViz LED Lighting, the manufacturer behind the FireTech Brand. The HiViz Web site states that its product line includes LED scene lighting ranging from full-width low-profile brow lights to headlights and everything else in between. HiViz does not market warning lights for the public safety industry.
Massa, who is also a volunteer firefighter and an emergency medical technician, authored a very understandable white paper for the Fire Apparatus Manufacturers’ Association (FAMA) titled, “Fire Apparatus Headlights: A Lot to Know” (https://www.fama.org/forum_articles/fire-apparatus-headlights-lot-know/). He agreed to be interviewed for this article and to speak in nontechnical terms. Three of his white paper comments worth pondering are paraphrased below:
- Some million-dollar fire apparatus today still use 1960s-era headlight designs.
- What most firefighters would like changed on a rig’s lighting is the headlights.
- Some apparatus committees specify $40,000 worth of scene lights and $200 worth of archaic glass and halogen headlights.
I consider this Massa comment to be significant, hence, it is verbatim: “A properly designed set of headlights for use on roadways must be designed to comply with an extremely precise set of photometric requirements spelled out in both SAE standards as well as FMVSS108. This set of photometric requirements ensures light from the headlights is sufficiently bright to illuminate the roadway, but more importantly ensures that light from the headlight of your vehicle does not present a hazard to other vehicles sharin