By Alan M. Petrillo
Compartments on fire apparatus need to be covered to keep equipment inside and dirt and moisture out.
For many years, the typical kinds of coverings found on fire trucks were either swing-out or swing-up doors, the latter of which sometimes provided a sort of awning during inclement weather. But in recent years, roll-up doors have made big inroads into fire apparatus design, so much so that their popularity continues to increase year by year.
Not New to the Fire Service
Steve Touchton, emergency products manager for R-O-M Corporation, says his company has been in business more than 60 years and has made roll-up doors since the early 1980s, first for the European market. "We were the first company to bring roll-up shutters to the United States and the fire market," Touchton says. "We now make the Series III roll-up shutter and have about 80 percent of the United States fire market."
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1 R-O-M Corporation makes Series III vertical roll-up doors of aircraft-grade 6063T6 aluminum alloy, shown here in the partially opened position. (Photo courtesy of R-O-M Corporation.) |
A&A Manufacturing, makers of Gortite roll-up doors, got into making roll-up doors for the fire industry in 2000, Ken Czyzewski, sales and marketing manager, says and has 40 years of experience in making roll-up covers for the machine tool industry. "All Gortite roll-up doors are available with manual and power lock options, as well as LED lighting and door ajar switches," he adds. "We also make a walk-on hosebed cover that retracts to the back end of the hosebed. It's a stainless steel skin with aluminum ribs for reinforcement and will hold 250 pounds every two feet of length."
Ray Van Gunten, president of Dover Roller Shutters Inc., says his firm is part of AM Group, which owns Diamond Roll-Up Doors and purchased Dover Roller Shutters in England in 2004. "We had been making roll-up doors under the Diamond name since the 1990s, but now it is all under the Dover name," Van Gunten says.
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2 DuroStrip LED compartment lighting is built into the roll-up doors that R-O-M Corporation fabricated for this Seagrave pumper. (Photo courtesy of R-O-M Corporation. |
John Seehof, president of Hansen International Inc., says his firm has been in business for 40 years providing D-ring door hardware for swing-out and swing-up compartment doors and also makes roll-up doors for the fire service. "Ten years ago, we surveyed firefighters about what they wanted to see in roll-up doors," Seehof says. "They wanted better hand clearance, an unlatched door indicator, and the ability to have a custom-designed door. We addressed all those issues for them."
Construction
Czyzewski says, "Everyone's roll-up doors are fairly similar in design, with individual slats hinged together to form the door. They are made out of aluminum and have a weather seal in between the slats to keep out dust, dirt, moisture, and road salts."
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Posted: Oct 10, 2014
Robert Tutterow
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Robert Tutterow |
In last month's column, I reviewed the state of personal protective equipment (PPE) cleaning in the United States. In this month's column, I will get into the "nuts and bolts" of PPE care and maintenance.
In June, I was fortunate to be involved in the inaugural Fire Industry Equipment Research Organization (F.I.E.R.O.) Fire PPE Workshop at the Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW) Airport Fire Training and Research Facility. The location provided an excellent setting for an assembly of fire department personnel in a state where National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) 1851, Standard on Selection, Care and Maintenance of Protective Ensembles for Structural Fire Fighting and Proximity Fire Fighting, compliance is enforced by the Texas Commission on Fire Protection. The workshop included presentations on risk assessment, dirty PPE and cancer, handling a line-of-duty death, understanding third-party verification, inspection and cleaning, and a panel discussion of PPE caretakers in four DFW area fire departments.
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1 This was a bucket of clean water before a set of turnout gear soaked in it for two hours following a room-and-contents fire. (Photo by Tim Tomlinson.) |
Cancer Risk
Cindy Ell, executive director of the International Fire Fighter Cancer Foundation, captured everyone's attention with a presentation on firefighter cancer. Here are a few of the highlights of her presentation. She stated that cancer is now an epidemic in the fire service. According to research, firefighters are 100 percent more likely to get cancer than the general population. There are more toxins and carcinogens present in the current fire environment than in the fires of previous generations. Male firefighters are 100 percent more likely to get testicular cancer than nonfirefighting males. They are at a 28 percent higher risk for prostate cancer. There is indication that female firefighters are more at risk for breast cancer and other cancers. All firefighters are at 50 percent higher risk for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. And, there are increases in brain, colon, and thyroid cancers as well as melanoma.
The contaminants are getting into the body by ingestion, inhalation-don't ever breathe smoke!-and absorption. The exposures are cumulative. It's not just the "big" fires that are producing toxins and carcinogens. It applies to vehicle fires, odor investigations, dumpster fires, electrical fires, and on and on. It was interesting to learn that the parts of the body most susceptible to absorption are the groin and head-especially the jaw. The best ways to minimize these risks are gross decontamination on the scene followed by a thorough shower back at the fire station. Yes, all volunteer fire stations should have shower facilities so that firefighters can remove contaminants from their bodies before exposing their families.
It is also important that self-contained breathing apparatus face pieces be thoroughly cleaned after every use. Additionally, the Phoenix (AZ) Fire Department now collects firefighters' hoods following a working fire, provides the firefighters with clean hoods, and takes the contaminated hoods directly from the fire scene to the department's cleaning facility. A final thought on protecting against skin absorpti
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