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The purpose of the Fire Mechanics Section is to promote standardization of fire apparatus and equipment preventative maintenance, improve safety standards and practices, promote workshops, conferences, and seminars related to the purposes of this Section, and to promote cost savings through standardization of building and equipment purchasing and maintenance.

RECENT FIRE MECHANIC NEWS

Posted: Apr 1, 2019

Fire Apparatus Drivers Using SCBA?

 
keeping it safe Robert Tutterow
 
 

Driver-Operator Use of SCBA

Should the driver-operator use a self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) while on the scene of a working fire? And for clarity, this means actually breathing the SCBA’s air as opposed to simply wearing the SCBA. Based on emerging information, the answer to that question is yes! This certainly goes against the traditional mindset.

THE DRIVER-OPERATOR ENVIRONMENT

Robert Tutterow

Why should the driver-operator use an SCBA when he is not engaged in the firefight and might not be wearing any personal protective equipment? Let’s take a deep-dive into the environment of the driver-operator. It is now known that carcinogens are prevalent in the warm zone of a fire scene. Historically, if we tested the air for safe removal of the SCBA, we used a CO meter. If the CO meter indicated the air was safe to breathe, then the SCBA came off. However, we have learned that carcinogens are very prevalent despite CO levels. And, there is always the possibility of a wind shift that could engulf the driver-operator’s position.

The air quality around a working fire scene is not as safe as once believed. This revelation was proven in an unexpected result of a carcinogen study on live fires conducted by the Illinois Fire Service Institute. The research study showed that a significant amount of the contaminants came from the diesel exhaust of the pumping engine. So, with the combined contaminants from the fire and the diesel exhaust, the driver-operator is likely facing a far riskier health hazard than previously thought. This scenario also applies to vehicle and dumpster fires.

The driver-operator is also exposed to diesel exhaust at nonemergency events. For example, career drivers-operators are exposed during their daily apparatus checkouts if the apparatus is not connected to a source-capture diesel exhaust system. Likewise, volunteer drivers-operators are exposed during weekly apparatus checkouts if the apparatus is not connected to a source-capture system.

Dawn Bolstad-Johnson, MPH, CIH, CSP, FAIHA wrote a book titled EXPOSED—Carcinogenic Exposures on the Fireground and 11 Work Practices to Minimize the Risk, published in late 2018. She is an industrial hygienist with a background in emergency services, including 19 years with the Safety Section of the Phoenix (AZ) Fire Department. In her book, she clearly outlines the hazardous carcinogens found at fire scenes and fire stations. One of her focus areas is the driver-engineer, and she provides a case study of Phoenix Fire Department Engineer Andy Brunelle, who acquired job-related cancer. An interesting quote from Engineer Brunelle is, “Wearing an SCBA is inconvenient for an hour, but getting a cancer diagnosis is inconvenient for the rest of your life.”

DIFFERING ROLES

The role o

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Posted: Apr 1, 2019

Turtle Plastics “Pays It Forward”

 
to the rescue Carl j. Haddon
 

Turtle Plastics “Pays It Forward”

Most people know Turtle Plastics (Lorain, Ohio) as the company that makes the Turtle Tile compartment matting found inside most fire apparatus.

Carl j. Haddon

Others know it as the company that makes the heavy-duty plastic cribbing, step chocks, and bag pads that are made from recycled plastic milk jugs. Few, however, know of its philanthropic works and finding new solutions to age-old fire service and industrial challenges.

The company’s latest endeavor is to bring awareness to the very large issue of grain entrapment that occurs in grain storage bins, silos, transport trucks, trains, and cargo ships. Technically, a grain entrapment occurs when a victim is buried in grain beyond his ability to self-extricate. In a grain engulfment, the victim is entirely covered beneath grain. Half of grain entrapments lead to engulfments, which are almost always fatal. In addition to bins and silos, statistics show more than 140 recorded deaths have been related to grain transport boxes—mainly children riding atop grain loads and being sucked in as dump gates are opened. It’s a category with an incomparable impact on farm families: 95 percent of victims are boys with an average age of 11.

Even with training and awareness, danger is always lurking. Research cites an Illinois fire department undergoing grain bin rescue training. The assistant fire chief of the department hosting the training, also a grain farmer, suffocated in a grain bin just weeks after the training session.

THE PRODUCT

Although it is thought that grain entrapment is confined to “Grain States,” this is not at all true. Truck, train, and cargo ship loads of grain traverse this country regularly. Most states have grain storage bins or silos in everywhere from livestock feed lots to industrial breakfast cereal making facilities! Believe it or not, Purdue University research shows that from 2006 to 2016, grain entrapments accounted for roughly 50 percent of all reported confined space incidents in the nation.

 1 Photo courtesy of Turtle Plastics.

1 Photo courtesy of Turtle Plastics.

The Turtle Plastics answer to this rescue challenge is called the “Turtle Tube” (US Patent D809,210). A few years ago, I was introduced to Turtle Plastic’s Grain Entrapment Rescue Tube during a confined space grain bin rescue program (photo 1). For 2019, Turtle has redesigned its “Turtle Tube” by adding a self-contained (no parts to drop into the grain) and a self-latching system for faster and safer deployment. Additionally, it has added a serrated edge to the bottom of the tube to allow for less resistance when pushing the tube into the grain and around the victim. Unlik

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Posted: Apr 1, 2019

New York Fire Department Takes Delivery of KME Rescue-Pumper

 
Apparatus ideas BOB VACCARO
 
 
 

Manhasset-Lakeville (NY) KME Rescue-Pumper

The Manhasset-Lakeville (NY) Fire Department has one of the largest fire districts on Long Island. It covers 10 square miles and has a residential population of more than 44,000, with more than three times that amount during the workweek.

BOB VACCARO

Within the district there are two major hospitals, an industrial park, three high schools, seven middle and elementary schools, numerous shopping centers, houses of worship, office buildings and stores, major access highways, and a town hall. It also covers more than two miles of shorefront.

It has a large inventory of fire apparatus that responds out of five stations. Apparatus purchases keep the fire district busy, having replaced several ladders, pumpers, and ambulances over the past several years. “The latest apparatus due to be replaced was a heavy rescue going to Company 3,” states Kyle Dugger, assistant superintendent of the Manhasset-Lakeville Fire District. “We began the spec-writing process about 11⁄2 years ago. We try to go with a 20-year plan for our engines and 15 years with our ladders. Like most other fire districts, we also look at maintenance issues and, of course, our budget.”

1 The Manhasset-Lakeville (NY) Fire Department’s 2018 KME rescue-pumper. (Photos by author.)

“The district has had a wide variety of rescue trucs through the years,” continues Dugger, “from our first rescue in 1957 to our current purchase. Our committee basically tried to mirror a rescue truck purchase we had back in 2011 that went to Company 5. It was a different manufacturer, but the body configuration was kept the same with some minor changes.”

DESIGNING THE RIG

The last rescue operated by Company 3 w

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Posted: Apr 1, 2019

Compartmentation

Editor’s Note: There is more to compartmentation on a new rig than picking compartment sizes and picturing where equipment will go. Often, once you mount the equipment, you discover you don’t have as much space as you thought. Editorial Advisory Board members Bill Adams and Ricky Riley draw on their experiences specing rigs and offer their thoughts on using compartment space wisely.

 

Compartmentation

In designing your apparatus, there are many choices that must be made. These include many large components such as engine, transmission, pump type, and size, etc. Depending on your department’s operational needs, a few of these choices can affect the body size and type you will be getting on the rig. Even choices of low hosebeds, discharges, and intakes coming off the rear can influence body styles.

These body styles have the compartments attached to them, and they require your time and attention. This attention starts with the department’s determination of what equipment it needs to carry to accomplish its job in its community and response area. And then, how will it be carried and accessed during these incidents? During the specification process and the engineering conference is the time to determine what compartment style will be needed on the apparatus.

COMPARTMENT DESIGNS

In early designs of apparatus I was associated with, designing compartments was not an option or was frowned on by manufacturers. And, the cost associated with a special design was usually astronomical and hard to swallow for the tools or equipment that it was being made for. In recent years, the design of body compartments on apparatus in my part of the world has been increasingly custom based on the department’s needs for storing and removing equipment. The cost of some of these compartment designs has come down by the majority of the manufacturers. But, make no mistake—it still costs money to have these body compartments made nonstandard and then customized for the department’s equipment layout.

Some of the decisions on compartments will need to focus on the weight of what will be carried in them. Depending on the type of apparatus you are buying, such as a ladder truck or heavy rescue, these compartments may need to have the floors or the structure holding the compartments beefed up or reinforced. The weight of some of the equipment can cause it to bounce on the floors or shelves. This bouncing without the reinforcement could cause damage to the compartments.

Also consider how the components of the apparatus, such as water tanks, piping, frame rails, and other components, might intrude in your compartment area. A clean, square compartment is rare because of the way the bodies are mounted around these things and manufacturers making use of available space. At the engineering conference, ask questions about what is being mounted in each compartment that might impact the usable space of the compartment. This includes shelving track; supports for back wall stiffening; and items such as battery conditioners, plugs, and electrical panels. All these take up space in your compartment and can make getting your equipment in sometimes difficult, although computer drawings and accurate equipment dimensions can help ensure items wi

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Fire Mechanics Section Board

Chair

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Chair

Elliot Courage
North Whatcom Fire & Rescue
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Vice Chair

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Vice Chair

Mike Smith 
Pierce County Fire District #5
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Secretary

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Secretary

Greg Bach
South Snohomish County Fire & Rescue
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Director #1

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Director #1

Doug Jones
South Kitsap Fire & Rescue
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Director #2

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Director #2

Paul Spencer 
Fire Fleet Maintenance LLC
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Director #3

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Director #3

Jim Morris
Mountain View Fire Department
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Director #4

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Director #4

Arnie Kuchta

Clark County Fire District 6

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Director #6

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Director #6

Brett Annear
Kitsap County Fire District 18
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Director #5

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Director #5

Jay Jacks
Camano Island Fire & Rescue
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Legislative Representative

Posted: Oct 21, 2015

Legislative Representative

TBD
TBD
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Immediate Past Chair

Posted: Oct 20, 2015

Immediate Past Chair

Brian Fortner
Graham Fire & Rescue

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