Alan M. Petrillo
Makers of fire apparatus and equipment are reporting more deals with various branches of United States military services, as well as other nongovernmental agencies-Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, Coast Guard, Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, and others.
Very often, equipment is developed for the military, which then trickles down for use in municipal and industrial applications. And, the reverse also is true-the military purchases tried-and-true municipal firefighting apparatus and equipment because they meet its particular needs.
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(1) The Cobra EXM, along with other monitors in the Elkhart Brass
EXM line, was developed as a result of work done with United States
military services. (Photo courtesy of Elkhart Brass.)
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Water Appliances
Rick Singer, vice president of North American sales for Akron Brass Company, says his company's dual-flow handline nozzle started its life as a design for the United States Navy, as did a portable monitor design that could be used for shipboard fires. Akron Brass works with all five branches of the United States military, as well as with the National Guard. "The original concept for the Mercury portable monitor was for the Navy," Singer points out, "where Navy personnel could deploy and leave an unmanned device to fight fires on a ship. Likewise, our dual-flow nozzle started as a military design for the Navy. It was later expanded, refined, and provided to the municipal fire market as the SaberJet nozzle."
The Akron SaberJet can put out a solid stream, fog pattern, or both at the same time, Singer notes. "In some cases, the products we provide to the military have been highly specialized to meet stringent and unique military requirements," Singer says. "There's often a need for design robustness that can withstand a saltwater environment or to take excessive shock or vibration."
Another firefighting solution embraced by the military that is finding its way into municipal departments is ultra-high-pressure (UHP) applications, Singer adds. "UHP designs are moving from United States Air Force applications, where a lot of UHP testing and work have been done, and into the municipal fire world and the wildland fire industry," he says.
On the other hand, Singer says, "We've seen solutions started on the civilian side that get taken up by the military, with remote control monitor solutions that have for a long time been embraced in industrial firefighting now being applied by various military branches."
Rod Carringer, chief marketing officer for Task Force Tips (TFT), says TFT also works with all United States military branches because fire suppression is part of their mission at nearly every level. "We've done a lot of work with the Navy, especially on submarines," Carringer says. "They ask us for certain design and performance standards, and often they are not too far from what we offer commercially to municipal and industrial customers."
Carringer says a lot of the TFT military business is in manual handheld nozzles, monitors, and foam-making equipment that is very similar to the kinds of equipment used by municipal fire departments. "A lot of military firefighting deals with base activities, so it is pretty much the same equipment and apparatus as you'd find in your local fire department," he says. "However, there are some specific hazards on bases that have to be dealt with, and those sometimes requ