Alan M. Petrillo
Nozzle technology has become so advanced, the firefighter on the nozzle has an array of options for choosing flow, stream, and even pressure. Manufacturers of nozzles have spent time through focus groups and voice-of-the-customer sessions with seasoned handline-using firefighters to determine how to provide better streams and allow for adjustments in flow, stream, and pressure.
Final Stop
Eric Combs, director of marketing for Elkhart Brass, characterizes the nozzle as an integral part of the fire suppression solution. "It's the last part in the whole system of the water supply, the pump, the pressure governor, and the hose," says Combs, "and all components have to work in concert with one another. If you change the pressure flow setting on the nozzle, it will have an effect on the system, including changing the flow on other devices in the system."
Combs notes that Elkhart Brass engages in what it calls "active listening"-engaging with firefighters and fire departments face to face to determine what the industry wants out of nozzle performance. "The number one element that firefighters want from their nozzle is an effective fire stream every time they open it up," Combs says.
He points out that a number of variables are at work in putting water on a fire through a nozzle: flow rate, stream quality, stream reach, and reaction force. "But at the end of the day, it's the gallons per minute (gpm) to remove British thermal units (Btus) that put the fire out," he adds. "That's where it's so important to know your flow and how your nozzle is performing."
Elkhart Brass makes four types of nozzles for handline use, Combs says: deluge, fixed-gallonage, selectable, and automatic. He notes that adding foam, ultra high pressure, or compressed air foam (CAF) can improve the effectiveness of most nozzles even more than by using plain water.
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(1) Akron Brass Co.'s HydroFX nozzle incorporates a flow-sensing
device in the waterway and displays water flow through
colored LED lights placed on the nozzle body under the bail.
(Photo courtesy of Akron Brass Co.) |
Simplicity
Rod Carringer, chief marketing officer (CMO) for Task Force Tips (TFT), says firefighters have told TFT that they want their equipment to be simplified, robust, and easy to use. "The pendulum has swung from the long-time usage of only smoothbore tips a number of years ago toward combination nozzles," Carringer says. "Take a look at a rig today and you may see five or six defined attack lines with specific nozzles on them designed for two- or three-firefighter operation."
David Durstine, vice president of marketing for Akron Brass Co., says his company also has reached out to firefighters for their input on nozzles and received many responses to keep the nozzle and its operation simple. "That's why we unveiled our new nozzle, the Hydro FX," Durstine says. "The Hydro FX incorporates a patent-pending flow-sensing device in the waterway that takes measurements of the water flow, correlates them against predetermined settings, and displays the flow rate via LED lights."
Durstine says a predetermined flow rate might be 150 gpm at 100 pounds per square inch (psi). If the flow rate is at or above 150 gpm, the LED light on the nozzle sensor would be green. For a flow rate below 150 gpm but above the predetermined low-flow setting, a yellow LED would light up. If the flow drops below the low-flow setting, 100 gpm for instance, the LED goes to a red indicator. "Instead of guessing about the flow, a firefighter has visual indication of