Special Delivery Alan M. Petrillo
West Hancock Ambulance Service covers approximately 200 square miles of the western part of Hancock County, a mostly rural district that encompasses five towns: Britt, Woden, Crystal Lake, Kanawha, and Corwith.
West Hancock operates out of a single station in Britt with three ambulances staffed by four full-time paid paramedics, one full-time paid driver, and 20 volunteer drivers and emergency medical technicians (EMTs).
Jennifer Vaske, the director of West Hancock and also a paramedic, says the ambulance service wanted to replace a 2009 Type 3 ambulance, so it checked out what ambulance makers had to offer and chose Wheeled Coach to build it a new rig. “The difficulty was that we placed the order for the ambulance during the COVID pandemic, so it took three years for us to get the new rig,” she points out.
Mindie Simons, sales manager for Feld Fire, who sold the ambulance to West Hancock, says the Ford shutdown of light truck chassis during the pandemic caused quite a holdup on ambulance production. Ultimately, she found a work-around to the drought of light truck chassis. “There is a local auto dealer, Pritchard Automotive, that handles a lot of utility trucks on Ford F-550 chassis, so we gave them the spec of what we needed for an ambulance, and they filled an available spot and placed the order with Ford,” Simons says. “Wheeled Coach had approved the spec, and the chassis was delivered directly to them in Orlando. With the COVID situation, we had to be creative, and by going through Pritchard, we cut about four to six months off their wait time.”
Simons says the completed Wheeled Coach Type 1 is built on a Ford F-550 4×4 chassis, powered by a 6.7-liter diesel engine, with dual alternators, a Vanner LifeSine® inverter, and Liquid Spring front and rear suspensions. Wheelbase on the rig is 193 inches, overall length is 25 feet 5 inches, and the patient module is 170 inches long with