SOMERSET - The gold No. 5 on the glistening fire engine is symbolic, its capabilities first class. Engine No. 5 pumps water on a fire at 1,500 gallons a minute and is modernized with state-of-the-art communications. It will back up rescue runs with quick-access storage of medical equipment.
And as Fire Chief Scott Jepson stood beside the 2016 Pierce Saber front-line engine, he thought back to 1992 and his first year as a firefighter.
“Engine 5 was one of the trucks here when Somerset engines started to go on medical calls with the ambulance. That’s why I wanted to have Engine 5 back again.
“It’s a little bit of tradition, a little bit of nostalgia,” Jepson, in his ninth year as chief, said this week about installing the engine numeral again.
The cab of the $440,000 truck, built in Florida, has compartments inside and out designed to make medical and other equipment accessible without entering it, Jepson said.
The department that responds to approximately 3,000 rescue calls a year with its two ambulances and engine support, and Jepson moved around Engine 5 to show pull-out compartments that will hold equipment from medical bags to Jaws of Life cutting tools.
Interior compartments are also accessible from outside, leaving space for firefighters’ gear and lessening their need to leave it on the floor of the cab, Jepson said.
Veteran firefighter Ron Audette, who began his career in Fall River, put on a Blue Tooth headset, and said, “I’m on a scene and I come out of the truck. I can maintain communication.”
On the 2003 Engine 6 it will replace or 1995 Engine 3, being shifted to a reserve status, they used wired headsets to communicate between dispatchers, supervisors and each other. When they hit the fire scene, the headsets and connection stayed behind.