Showing posts with label Quint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quint. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Friday, January 6, 2012
Just what is a Quint anyway?
We have received a lot of emails from people outside the fire department confused about what exactly a Quint is or does.
Lets define fire apparatus...
Fire engine- A fire engine is a piece of equipment that serves the purpose of providing water and hose lines. The main job of the engine company is to extinguish the fire.
Fire truck - A fire truck is a piece of equipment that serves the purpose of ventilating a fire, forcing entry to the property for the engine company and searching for victims of a fire.
Notice: No hose or pump. The truck company is a specialized job which requires years to master.
Rescue truck - In a traditional department, the rescue is a speciality piece which provides specialty operations, including vehicle extrication, dive/swift water rescue, high angle/trench rescue and hazmat operations.
In Richmond we currently run a Quint concept. A Quint is called a Quint because it can do five things
- Deploy a 75 to 105 Foot Aerial Ladder
- Pump water
- Carry hoses
- Carry a booster tank
- Carry ground ladders
The Quint concept was designed for the city as a cost saving measure by merging a traditional fire engine and fire truck as one piece. In theory you would always have the same piece of equipment responding to you for whatever emergency you have.
Notice the ladder on top with pump and hose.
In Richmond if there is a structure fire reported you will get: 5 Quints, 1 Rescue and 2 Battalion Chiefs.
In a traditional department if there is a structure fire reported you will get: 4 or 5 Engines, 1 or 2 Trucks and 1 or 2 Battalion Chiefs. (Response models vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction.)
Some draw backs to this concept are:
- Quints are expensive, costing $200,000- $300,000 dollars more than other apparatus.
- Quints are large. In order for one piece to do two jobs, the piece needs to be much longer than a regular fire engine to hold the pump, water tank and ladders.
- Quint have a large repair cost to them. Simply to more stuff on a piece the more than can break and go wrong.
- Quints are heavy and are city streets are terrible. Station 5 in the city is the busiest with about 3,800 calls for service annually. This a tremendous amount of wear and tear to place on such a large unit.
- Quints make you a jack of all trade and a master of none. Firefighters usually move to a truck company after several years of service studying and mastering the job a truck company does. In Richmond you just become the truck company based on what order you are dispatched to a call.
The topic of the Quint concept is a tremendously large and heavily debated topic and is impossible to cover in one post. Hopefully this gave you a decent understanding on what a Quint is. If you have any questions please post them and we are sure you will be helped.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
The line has been crossed!
A decision has been made that is a blatant disregard for your safety as well as the safety of our citizens. New thermal imaging cameras scheduled to be delivered with the 7 new pieces of equipment have been cancelled. A critical tool being used industry wide to assist in locating civilians as well as firefighters trapped and or lost within a building fire. Currently a company without a thermal imager is left to crawling around in complete darkness assisted only by their sense of touch and sound. For those of you not familiar with this, turn your lights off one night and see how long it takes you to get around your own bedroom. Now imagine a room you have never entered, seen the layout of, know the dimensions of and add temperatures reaching 1200 degrees or more.
Advances in technology have placed thermal imaging cameras in the hands of fire fighters around the world. These cameras allow a fire fighter to view a clear picture of a room allowing for a faster, smoother search pattern and in some cases an exact location of a downed civilian or firefighter. At current the City of Richmond does have some companies equipped with these cameras. However for years we have been asking the Chief to equip all apparatus, but have been met with excuses of budgetary constraints. Well now that we were taking a step towards providing all of our fire fighters with this invaluable piece of equipment to life safety, it has been dropped from the equipment list due to budgetary reasons. As you will see this money was needed elsewhere in the apparatus purchase.
Now, what do you think directly affects our safety and survival more, a thermal imager or a Zoll Road safety system used to track driving behaviors? Yes, after the cameras were dropped the Chief approved the allocation of funds for the Zoll system. Reason being there will now be a way to track driving habits to assist in reducing wear and tear, modify current driving behaviors and assist in providing statistics for a disciplinary system as it relates to driving. What has greater value…Brake Pads or human life?
Advances in technology have placed thermal imaging cameras in the hands of fire fighters around the world. These cameras allow a fire fighter to view a clear picture of a room allowing for a faster, smoother search pattern and in some cases an exact location of a downed civilian or firefighter. At current the City of Richmond does have some companies equipped with these cameras. However for years we have been asking the Chief to equip all apparatus, but have been met with excuses of budgetary constraints. Well now that we were taking a step towards providing all of our fire fighters with this invaluable piece of equipment to life safety, it has been dropped from the equipment list due to budgetary reasons. As you will see this money was needed elsewhere in the apparatus purchase.
Now, what do you think directly affects our safety and survival more, a thermal imager or a Zoll Road safety system used to track driving behaviors? Yes, after the cameras were dropped the Chief approved the allocation of funds for the Zoll system. Reason being there will now be a way to track driving habits to assist in reducing wear and tear, modify current driving behaviors and assist in providing statistics for a disciplinary system as it relates to driving. What has greater value…Brake Pads or human life?
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
Coming Soon!
Wish we knew how much these cost or how we are going to be disciplined for our driving infractions. But here is a nice coming attraction to the Zoll system.
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