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Posted: Sep 15, 2016

Brookesmith (TX) VFD Gets New Fire Apparatus

Some West Texas volunteer firefighters got a shot in the arm to help battle flames, courtesy of the A&M Forest Service. She's a five-ton retired military cargo truck.
Firefighters added a new coat of paint a couple water tanks donated from the Early Fire Department.

Chief Will Boenicke said the truck will be used as a heavy brush truck in the battle against wildfires.

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Posted: Sep 15, 2016

Hermitage (PA) Has New Rescue Fire Apparatus

In Hermitage Fire Department's old rescue truck, many things were in boxes. If a firefighter needed a specific piece of equipment and didn't know which box it was in, he or she had to hunt for it. But, that's not a problem in the new truck.
The department likes to replace its major pieces of equipment every 20 or 25 years, and the International heavy rescue truck was a 1996. Firefighters spent about a year researching trucks and features, debating new versus used, and going to see potential models.

They saw a similar model to the Rescue 1 truck with a Spartan chassis they ended up buying in Pittsburgh, and then headed in April to Indianapolis to see a demonstration model at the Fire Department Instructor Conference. The group brought it back to Hermitage for a tryout, and then decided to buy it.

Truck 112, the new heavy rescue vehicle, went in service Aug. 16 and has been on five or six calls. It has all the bells and whistles, from an LED light tower and a generator powered by the engine to a 30-gallon water tank for creating fire retardant foam, plus air packs embedded in the passenger seats, allowing firefighters to put them on while en route to a call.

The rescue carries much more equipment than the old model, Flynn said. The confined space equipment that had been spread over several vehicles is now in one place. The rapid intervention equipment is assembled and ready to go, instead of being disassembled for storage. The air cascade trailer that used to be pulled to a scene is gone, the equipment for filling air bottles nestled in the truck.

The truck seats six and carries warning cones, drinking water, cutters and saws, shovels, picks and pike poles, ropes, tarps, backboards, oil dry, tools and numerous other items for rescue. The department tries to keep up with advances in technology, new features and changing equipment ratings, he said. But, such an effort doesn’t come cheap.

The big rescue’s price tag: $488,000.

The department is paying for it with $100,000 from the Hermitage-Patagonia Relief Association, which is given money by the state from fire insurance premiums collected by insurance companies located outside of the state: $188,000 from the truck fund, which is built up by donations from local individuals, businesses and organizations; and a $200,000 loan, which will be paid from the truck fund.

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Posted: Sep 15, 2016

Packanack Lake (NJ) Fire Company 5 Restores Antique Fire Apparatus

The Packanack Lake Fire Company 5 in Wayne had its 1951 Mack Fire Pumper restored and is having a "welcome home" ceremony for the rig at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday.
The pumper will be driven from the area of Ingraham Terrace to Lake Drive East to Osborne Terrace to the firehouse at 5 Lake Drive West.

"We are asking the public to line the arrival route and cheer on the return of this prized antique," President Mark McGrath said.

The Mack Model 75-A pumper was bought in 1951, nine years after the fire department was established.

Company 5 previously operated with two, donated "hand-me-down" trucks before acquiring the pumper, McGrath said.

The pumper was in use from 1951-66 before being replaced by a larger truck, he added.

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Posted: Sep 15, 2016

Aurora (CO) Using Pickups Instead of Fire Apparatus

Unlike in years past, the department is relying more and more on their Medical Services Units — specially outfitted pickup trucks staffed by a paramedic and a firefighter — to handle calls that don’t require a full-fledged fire truck.
The department first started using the MSUs a few years ago, and last month expanded the program from two fire houses to three. They also extended the hours the units operate to 12 hours a day, seven days a week, up from 10 hours a day, four days a week. Aurora Fire Commander Mike Stanley, who oversees the department’s medical branch, said the trucks allow the department’s fire engines and ladder trucks to respond only to calls where that equipment is really needed, such as fires and traffic accidents.

With the MSU covering many of those medical calls — such as slip-and-falls, strokes, seizures and others — the engines can maintain quick response times.

Aurora City Councilman Bob LeGare has long advocated for the department to use the smaller trucks for medical calls, which make up more than two thirds of the department’s calls.

While the department largely sees the trucks as a way to keep response times down and save the fire engines for fires or other more-serious emergencies, LeGare said there is also a cost benefit to using the MSUs.

For now, Stanley said, the MSUs are deployed at three of the department’s busier stations — Station No. 1 near East 16th Avenue and Dayton Street, Station No. 4 near East Mississippi Avenue and South Peoria Street and, now, Station No. 7 near East Iliff Avenue and Interstate 225.

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Posted: Sep 15, 2016

Fireaway Inc. Builds Full-Scale Fire Research and Test Facility

Stat-X products

Fireaway Inc., the manufacturer of Stat-X® condensed aerosol fire suppression generators, is constructing a new fire research and test facility in the United States.

This facility will be capable of full-scale testing of fire extinguishing systems in a volume exceeding 500 cubic meters. The capability will include data acquisition, video, IR imaging, and gas analysis. It will be the only facility of this size and capability in North America.

Once completed, this new capability will be used for testing to confirm the suitability of Stat-X aerosol systems to meet customers’ demanding requirements, further development of Stat-X aerosol extinguishing systems, testing for new applications and obtaining additional international approvals.

This new facility reinforces the company's commitment to innovation in fire extinguishing. It is located at Fireaway’s agent manufacturing plant in Minden, Louisiana.

About Stat-X Fire Suppression Systems

Stat-X First Responders® and Stat-X fixed systems are highly-advanced automatic condensed aerosol fire suppression solutions. These fire suppression units are UL Listed, made in the USA, and approved for normally-occupied spaces. Their product is used to save lives and protect assets. These units are deployed in the toughest conditions worldwide, including surface and underground mines, military vehicles, long haul buses, rolling stock, remote telecom sites, wind turbines, power substations, electrical cabinets, and various marine and off-shore settings.  Capable of being manually, thermally or electrically activated by industry-standard control panels, Stat-X provides highly effective and economical fire suppression solutions to customers around the world.

Stat-X is manufactured by Fireaway Inc., an ISO 9001-2008 certified company with production facilities in Minnetonka, Minnesota, and Minden, Louisiana.   

Visit www.statx.com, for further information or to locate a certified distributor in your area.

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