The Ridgefield Fire Department's new No. 2 engine - a 2016 4 Guys/Spartan rescue-pumper - is a shining example of the digital revolution. Equipped with a 750-gallon water tank, a 10-gallon Class A foam tank and a 20-gallon Class B foam tank, the new apparatus's pump panel - the control center for water, foam, tachometer, and volume - is mostly electrically operated.
“Even the engine throttle is an electric push-button affair,” said fire Chief Kevin Tappe, going over the vehicle’s features.
He explained to The Press that Class B foam is necessary for flammable liquid fires — such as gasoline, diesel fuel or oil — and that Class A foam is a wetting agent that reduces the surface tension of water, allowing it to penetrate objects deeper and thus extinguish fire faster in combustibles like wood, paper and furniture.
“This is important for us, since we respond with very limited staffing and must do more with less,” he said. “The fire pump is a 1,500-gallon-per-minute pump.”
The rescue-pumper will be located at the department’s Ridgebury station and is equipped to handle that terrain better than a lot of its predecessors.
“Even in Ridgebury, where there is no Verizon signal, we have built-in cell phone extenders in the new engine in order to reach hard-to-access cell locations,” Chief Tappe said.
“Another technology addition is the use of iPads on all of our apparatus to store water source locations, pre-plans, and Knox-Box locations,” he said.
Seeing double
Tappe said the new No. 2 engine was built to resemble “as closely as possible” the department’s No. 1 engine at fire headquarters on Catoonah Street.
According to the chief, this helps
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