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Posted: Aug 18, 2016

Striker Simulator Sets the Benchmark for Realism

Virtual reality training is becoming more common across a wide range of applications and industries. From laparoscopic surgeons to aircraft fighter pilots, trainees everywhere are benefiting from this state-of-the-art technology. The trend has advanced to a new level of realism in the realm aircraft rescue and fire fighting with the Striker Simulator virtual reality aircraft rescue and fire fighting (ARFF) training system by Oshkosh Airport Products.

The Striker Simulator began as a stand-alone project for Chicago’s O’Hare International airport. “The O’Hare ARFF team requested that we build a simulator to enhance their driver and incident command training,” says Richard Voakes, Oshkosh Airport Products western regional and government sales manager. “We’ve also built a demo unit for our customer acceptance area as well as for trade shows.” 

A “green solution” with zero environmental impact, the Striker Simulator is engineered to depict a nearly endless array of situations and scenarios. The system incorporates video footage and illustrated environments of Striker trucks in action—with views from both inside and outside of the cab and with a full audio track—for a giant leap forward in realism. Hundreds of hours of footage was created to capture the endless array of emergency response scenarios the Striker Simulator can recreate. The system depicts different environmental and weather conditions such as rain, snow, fog, night, and bright daylight. It can accurately depict the delivery of firefighting agents such as dry chemical, foam, water, and even Halon. In addition, the Striker Simulator can mimic scenarios that can’t be safely accomplished at a traditional training center, such as a fuel spill or people exiting an airplane.

The Striker Simulator offers unmatched control of each training scenario. The system includes a Scenario Toolbox that enables incident commanders to develop highly realistic and varied emergency situations from an easy-to- use drop-down menu. “The incident commander has total flexibility to custom design scenarios,” adds Voakes. “For example, these can feature a large number of airplanes, multiple fires and fuel spills, and even people on the ground—it’s basically unlimited.” While a traditional ARFF firefighter may typically participate in real-world training once every year or every other year, the Striker Simulator training can be ongoing and on a regular schedule. The typical 24-hour firefighter shift schedule presents an ideal opportunity for blocks of time that could be used for training, and the Striker Simulator enables realistic, more varied, and more intensive training.

At its most basic configuration, the Striker Simulator includes a laptop computer that is synchronized with the steering wheel, joystick control, and pedals. This advanced configuration includes actual Striker cockpit components and a complete 180-degree view ahead—featuring up to three 70-inch widescreen HD monitors—and a fourth overhead. “It’s one thing to see photos or video of the Striker Simulator, but quite another thing entirely to operate it from the simulator’s driver’s seat,” said Voakes.  “You are buckled into an actual driver’s seat; it’s

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Posted: Aug 18, 2016

Romeoville's Shiny New Fire Station Will Improve Efficiency: Officials

A new, modern firehouse is officially open in Romeoville but officials say it will maintain its small-town charm. They unveiled the facility at 18 Montrose Drive on Saturday, Aug. 13. Its site is the same as the previous Fire Station 1, which will help ensure that it remains a "neighborhood firehouse," fire officials said.

"We were pleased that we were able to rebuild the station in its current location with cash on hand and without any new debt," Mayor John Noak said, in a community update.

This station also serves as the headquarters for Fire Department Administration. Emergency personnel will begin moving into the new facility during the coming weeks.




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Posted: Aug 18, 2016

Construction to Start on Fillmore Fire Station in Fall

By Kathleen Wilson of the Ventura County Star A Torrance company has been awarded the contract to build an $8 million fire station in Fillmore, replacing one dating from the early 1950s. Public works officials OK'd the award this week from a field of 15 bidders.

A Torrance company has been awarded the contract to build an $8 million fire station in Fillmore, replacing one dating from the early 1950s.

Public works officials OK'd the award this week from a field of 15 bidders. The station is one of five that the Ventura County Fire Department plans to replace. The others are in the Upper Ojai, Newbury Park, Thousand Oaks and Lake Sherwood.

Construction on the Fillmore station is due to start in October and be done in early 2018, officials said.

Tobo Construction Inc. submitted the winning bid of $8.13 million, almost $200,000 under the estimate of county engineering specialists.

The station will be built on a vacant 2.7-acre site near the intersection of Highway 126 and C Street. County Fire Chief Mark Lorenzen said the current station at 613 Old Telegraph Road is outdated, extremely small and the site is too cramped to allow expansion.

Fillmore has a volunteer fire department, but the county agency covers the unincorporated area and assists on fires within the city.

At 15,000 square feet, the new station will be more than three times the size of the current station. It will provide improved access to the highway, modern utility systems and adequate room for fire engines, Lorenzen said.

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Posted: Aug 18, 2016

Police: Projectile Shatters Ambulance Window

A bullet, a pellet, a rock - something shattered a window of an ambulance in North Bellport Tuesday, police and ambulance officials said. Two EMTs from the Mastic Beach Ambulance Company were returning from dropping off a patient at Brookhaven Memorial Hospital Medical Center in East Patchogue when the passenger side window shattered, said Charles Voelger, chief of the volunteer company.

“The window exploded,” he said. “We don’t know if someone threw a rock at it or if someone shot at it.”

Broken glass hit the EMT sitting next to the window and she suffered minor cuts on her arm, he said. “She was turned toward the driver at the time, thank God,” the chief said.

The window was broken at about 3 p.m. on eastbound Sunrise Highway, just east of Station Road, Voelger said.

The incident came on the same day the ambulance company learned its $20,000 grant request to buy bullet-resistant vests had been rejected by FEMA, Voelger said. The money would have purchased about 50 vests for the company, which has six full-time, paid EMTs and a core of 50 volunteers, he said.

Voelger said his members have been concerned about safety due in large part to tense relations between police and some communities across the nation.

He said he’s trying to pursue funding with state officials.

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Posted: Aug 18, 2016

Kansasville Fire Buys First New Ambulance

KANSASVILLE - With patient transport times to area hospitals taking anywhere from 20 to 25 minutes, having a reliable ambulance is crucial for the Kansasville Fire and Rescue Department. And for the first time since it began providing ambulance service in 2007, the department is in the training process so it can utilize its first new ambulance.

The new ambulance was purchased after three years of looking for a vehicle to replace its 1997 ambulance, which previously served another department. Due to recent mechanical failures with that vehicle, the department decided to acquire the new rig.

The new ambulance was purchased in late July.

“It’s a bigger vehicle, to begin with, than what we had before,” Kansasville Fire Chief Scott Remer said. “It was time to get our new ambulance.”

The 1997 ambulance was sold with 100,000 miles on it. The new rig, which cost $204,000 and had been a dealer demonstration model, has 5,000 miles on it.

“This is a demo vehicle, so we were able to save significant dollars,” Remer said.

Remer said training is underway with hopes of having the vehicle responding to calls by the end of August.

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