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Posted: Jul 8, 2013

NFPA Apparatus Standard Revision Cycle Begins

By Roger Lackore
Director of Product Safety
Oshkosh Corporation

The National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) Technical Committee on Fire Department Apparatus is the group that maintains the standards that specify the minimum requirements for automotive fire apparatus and trailers. For decades, this committee has considered revisions to the wildland and municipal standards on different schedules. Many requirements are applicable to both types of apparatus, so the fact that the standards were revised on different schedules created a degree of inconsistency.

To address this, the committee delayed revising the municipal standard and pulled forward the wildland standard. Beginning with the current cycle, revisions for both NFPA 1901, Standard for Automotive Fire Apparatus, and NFPA 1906, Standard for Wildland Fire Apparatus, will be considered together. This schedule will allow the committee to address issues that are common to both standards at the same time, keeping them current with one another.

FAMA Participation

Fire Apparatus Manufacturers' Association (FAMA) members have been actively participating on this committee for decades. They educate committee members on new apparatus safety features and benefits and keep the content of each standard technically sound. Since most fire departments adopt these standards as the foundation for new apparatus purchases, it is critical that changes to the standard are technically feasible and cost-effective and can be implemented on time.

The importance of the NFPA apparatus standards cannot be overstated. They are the established minimum criteria for apparatus that will provide safer operation for firefighters and the public they serve. Chiefs and safety officers should be intimately familiar with the content of these standards; how their fleets comply with these standards; and when old apparatus need to be retired, refurbished, or replaced.

Although individuals should not avoid reading the standards, there are other ways to become educated. FAMA has many downloadable resources to assist fire departments in understanding recent changes, navigating the NFPA process, keeping up with NFPA changes, and helping promote the benefits of safety features on new apparatus. Many of these resources are provided in presentation format for use at meetings within the fire department or with outside decision makers. These resources are available for free download at www.fama.org.

Potential Topics for Consideration

Although you might have thought that major changes in the 2009 edition of NFPA 1901 addressed all possible issues, there are still a number of topics that appear on the horizon. It is likely that the committee will be considering proposals to increase the minimum size of apparatus seating in response to a firefighter size and weight study completed by the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH). Since the widths of most custom cabs are already at or near the legal limit, significant changes to seat width requirements would eliminate the four-across seat configuration popular with some departments.

A likely topic for consideration on the wildland side will be the practice of allowing firefighters to ride on the back of apparatus during pump-and-roll operations. This is a common approach in certain regions for fighting grass fires, but it is counter to the fundamental philosophy that firefighters must be seated, belted, and inside an enclosed cab anytime the apparatus rolls. The committee will be challenged to provide some means of addressing this perceived need without compromising safety.

Advanced technology such as collision avoidance warning systems and automatic braking may be on the docket. The committee always struggles with balancing the cost of additional features with their potential benefits, part

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Posted: Jul 8, 2013

Wildland Water Appliances Evolve to Meet User Needs

Alan M. Petrillo

Component manufacturers have made great strides to fine tune various pumps, monitors, and nozzles so those pieces of equipment give the best performance when being operated in wildland and urban interface environments. And, new ways of handling old problems are continually being developed.

Wildland Nozzles

Elkhart Brass makes the Flex Attack nozzle, popular with wildland firefighters for use on handlines, says Eric Combs, marketing director, Elkhart Brass. "We offer it in a break-apart version that can be shut off, broken apart to extend the line, and then the tip attached at the end of the extension. This can be done quickly, without shutting down the entire line back to the apparatus."

Rod Carringer, vice president of sales and marketing for Task Force Tips (TFT), says his company's Tornado monitor has undergone changes requested by wildland crews. "We now have nozzle choices that integrate lighting and thermal imaging in them, which was driven by people operating in the wildland field," Carringer says. "These nozzles are being used on monitors on both Type I and Type III engines."

Carringer notes that TFT offers two separate styles of nozzles for wildland use. "Some users want totally restricted flows to conserve water, while others want the latitude to gate a valve in the command cab," he says. "They might want 15 gallons per minute (gpm) most of the time but need to go to 125 gpm at others."

Whipline
(1) KME partnered with Elkhart Brass to develop
Whipline and bring it to market. Whipline has flow
rates available from 30 to 120 gpm, is suitable for
pump pressures up to 300 pounds per square inch
(psi), and sweeps 90 degrees horizontally to each
side.
(Photo courtesy of KME.)
 

The Tornado monitor line also has an electronic oscillation function that allows an operator to set the monitor to remember a particular motion. "If the monitor is installed on the front edge of a truck's bumper, you can get about 220 degrees of oscillation," Carringer observes.

TFT also has developed nozzles that allow flow limiting, Carringer notes. "The nozzle might be set at a 10-, 15-, or 20-gpm limit, but it's still an automatic nozzle that controls the best stream at whatever limit it is set for."

He adds that there's a regular need for flushing wildland nozzles. "A lot of debris comes through the tanks and pumps and into the nozzles," Carringer says. "A lot bigger chunk will go through a pump than will come out a nozzle." Accordingly, TFT came up with Smart Stream, a nozzle where the operator has to make a secondary movement to flush. "The nozzle operator has to make one movement to flush and then hit it a second time," he notes. "It's a failsafe method to go to flush to get debris out of the line and then go back to firefighting."

David Durstine, vice president of marketing for Akron Brass Co., says that all Akron's nozzles used in wildland applications have a built-in flush setting to get rid of debris that might clog the nozzle. With the company's Forestry monitor, nozzles are available in several adjustable gallonage models as well as fixed-orifice, fixed-bore tips, stacked tips, and compressed air foam system (CAFS) tips.

Akron Brass Forestry monitor on its Ford-F550 extended cab 4x4 brush truck that carries a Hale HPX200 200-gpm pump, a 325-gallon water tank, and a 20-gallon foam cell Read more
Posted: Jul 8, 2013

The Stryker Stair-Pro

By Raul A. Angulo

One of the great inventions in the history of mankind was spurred from the question, "How can we make hard work easier?" So someone (probably an ancient truckie) invented the wheel. My favorite vignette about the invention of the wheel is from Gilligan's Island, a popular comedy TV series from the 1960s. In a dream scene, the castaways are prehistoric cavemen. The professor is trying to convince them that the wheel will be his greatest invention and is the most important item to take on a trip. In the next scene, the professor is fervently chiseling a wheel from a large stone. Once it's finished, he demonstrates it to Gilligan. But instead of rolling it, he flips the wheel on its side. Frustrated with failure, he throws the hammer and chisel over his shoulder and says, "Aw! Wheel not work!" Luckily, whoever invented the wheel actually used it the right way, and EMTs nationwide are grateful for that when transporting patients from their point of origin to awaiting rigs.

The Stryker Stair-Pro 6252
(1) The Stryker Stair-Pro 6252 is built with thick-wall, square-
channeled aluminum for strength, yet it is lightweight. It weighs
31.5 pounds and has a 500-pound weight capacity. The oversized
caster wheels maximize mobility in tight spaces. The entire unit is
power-washable for easy decon. (Photos by author).
 

In a previous issue, I reviewed the Stryker Power-Pro™ XT gurney. The Stryker Stair-Pro® Model 6252 stair chair is the companion unit that is a "must have" vital piece of EMS equipment. Firefighters and EMTs perform a wide variety of rescue and extrication techniques that require the use of some sort of equipment. Most take place in potentially dangerous situations or in uncontrolled hazardous environments. But one rescue technique, which contributes to a high number of back injuries, is a common procedure that occurs in a safe, benign environment-manually transporting a patient up or down a flight of stairs.

Scene Size-Up

When my company is dispatched to a medical emergency, we usually know the nature of the call from the run sheet. I have two lead firefighter/EMTs who will head up patient care. As a company officer, part of my job is to size up the nonmedical components of the incident to ensure scene safety. Scene safety is not limited to immediate threats to the patient and the crew like those encountered at a shooting or a motor vehicle accident on a freeway. Scene safety is also accident prevention and predicting actions that may lead to a back injury or a sprained ankle of a crew member during patient packaging and transport to the ambulance.

The patient foot rest has hook-and-loop straps to secure the patient's feet to the chair while descending the stairs
(2) The patient foot rest has hook-and-loop straps to secure the
patient's feet to the chair while descending the stairs. The foot-
end extendable handles are molded for better grip and control.
The handle's length and location provide the best position for
proper ergonomic lifting.
 

Ground-level incidents or those inside multistory buildings with wheelchair access and elevators pose little risk or difficulty during patient transport. The gurney is the preferred tool of choice. The problems occur when responding to single-family residences. Even a one-story house on a hill with a l

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Posted: Jul 8, 2013

NFPA 1917, Standard for Automotive Ambulances

Mike McEvoy

In 2008, the United States General Services Administration (GSA) announced that it would no longer revise and maintain its KKK Star-of-Life ambulance purchasing specification. Since 1974, the KKK specification has been used by federal agencies and organizations purchasing ambulances using federal grant monies. The government looked to the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA)-an organization with a long history of developing industry consensus standards, especially for public safety entities-to pick up the ball and develop a standard to replace the KKK specification. This turned out to be easier said than done.

Varying Standards

The KKK specification, now in its sixth iteration (called KKK-A-1822F, published in August 2008), was originally designed as a purchasing specification (i.e., a template for writing ambulance bid solicitations) yet has been extensively cited and adopted by almost two-thirds of the states as a de facto ambulance safety standard. Although certainly not unsafe, KKK never included specific practices for designing, building, and testing ambulances.

ASTM International (formerly known as the American Society for Testing and Materials) is a safety organization and publishes an industry consensus standard, F2020-02a, which outlines standard ambulance design, manufacturing, and purchasing practices. The Ambulance Manufacturers Division (AMD) of the National Truck Equipment Association (NTEA) publishes manufacturing standards for ambulances (standard 001-025) that specify static load testing of the ambulance body, stretcher mounts, and onboard oxygen cylinder mounts/straps.

The Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) publishes recommendations for testing passenger restraint systems and equipment mounts to protect against frontal and side-impact collisions. Sadly in the United States, ambulances have always been exempt from the federal motor vehicle safety standards (FMVSS), which serve to protect passenger lives and safety in most other vehicles on the highway.

To varying degrees, the KKK specification has evolved to include many AMD recommendations. Currently 25 AMD test standards appear in KKK. Others, such as ASTM, evolved to reflect the requirements of KKK. The challenge facing the NFPA 1917 committee was to develop a standard that not only incorporated purchasing specifications with design and testing standards but also reflected scientifically sound automotive safe engineering practices. This was further complicated by the proprietary nature of the many existing standards and a virtually nonexistent body of scientific evidence recommending best practices for the design and manufacture of a safer ambulance.

Patient Compartment Study

That's not to say that no one is working to analyze the patient compartment in an effort to make it a safer environment for patients and EMS providers. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) has been working with AMD to study passenger restraints and stretcher mounting devices for more than a decade. More recently, driven by concerns of multiple EMS advocacy groups, NIOSH has partnered with the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) to redesign the layout of the ambulance patient compartment to make it safer while still allowing providers to care for a patient during transport. During NFPA 1917's initial development, none of the NIOSH or NIST research had progressed to the point necessary for inclusion in a published standard.

The NFPA 1917 committee first met in June 2009, using NFPA 1901, Standard for Automotive Apparatus, as a template for its initial design of an ambulance standard. The committee considered creating a completely new standard to include crash restraint and safety technologies, but the dearth of sound crash testing studies virtually forced the committee to work with the existing KKK standard and do its bes

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Posted: Jul 8, 2013

Apparatus/Equipment News

KME 102-foot AerialCat platformKME 102-foot AerialCat™ platform offers short wheelbase and overall lengths and low travel heights. The platform itself has been redesigned to offer 22.6 square feet of clear work space. The new platform also offers 6.7 square feet of external working space. The parapet ladder access is provided at both sides of the platform, and it offers a movable platform control station, which allows for control of the device from the left, right, and center of the platform for easy operation. The KME AerialCat platform can offer an unrestricted 3,000-gpm waterflow option, achieved with a complete six-inch waterway and 100,000-psi steel ladder. It also offers a 94-foot horizontal reach, a 2.5:1 structural safety ratio, and -12 degree below-grade operation.
-www.kovatch.com, 570-669-9461

Waterous ACCESS pump moduleWaterous ACCESS™ pump module has a hinged top of the module, allowing access from the top to service or perform maintenance to the module. Also, removable panels on the right and left side and a swing-out foam proportioner enable further access. The ACCESS pump module can be equipped with the ONE STEP™ CAFSystem and the seven-inch SMARTPANEL™ Control System.
-www.waterousco.com, 651-450-5000

Elkhart Brass SafeLink single touchscreen interfaceElkhart Brass SafeLink single touchscreen interface integrates pump, valve, and monitor control into a single intuitive touchscreen. Developed in partnership with FRC, SafeLink lets operators manage all components in one central location, allowing firefighters to focus on directing water flow where they need it. SafeLink provides full engine governor controls, multiple valve control and operation, an intuitive 24-inch touchscreen, 1920- by 1080-pixel resolution, durable military spec enclosure, live camera feed video display, and extensive memory technology.
-www.elkhartbrass.com, 574-295-8330

Scott Safety AV-3000 HT FacepieceScott Safety AV-3000 HT Facepiece uses the AV-3000 SureSeal platform to deliver thermal durability and improved voice intelligibility. This allows the product to meet the requirements of National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) 1981, Standard on Open-Circuit Self-Contained Breathing Apparatus (SCBA) for Emergency Services, (2013 ed.) including those requirements for high heat and flame, radiant heat, and voice intelligibility. The AV-3000 HT features redesigned ducts, voicemitter locations, and dual voicemitters that enhance the facepiece communication to everyone in close proximity of the wearer, not just the individuals directly in front of the user. The AV-3000 HT enables right or left side mounting of Scott's EPIC 3 voice amplifiers to allow users to select the side they prefer. The facepiece flexes with every move and ensures firefighters can use one facepiece with a single fit test for all of their respiratory applications.
-www.scottsafety.com, 800-247-7257

Waterous ONE STEP CAFSystemRead more

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