Awesome video broski 😎 currently a Dispatcher for Tampa so love seeing whats going on on scene when Im on the radio talking to Command earned a new Subscriber
No other hydrants were accessible on the Alpha side of the structure and they wanted E6 to have a 5in supply ready to go because E10 was on the Alpha side as attack group 1 and they had already tapped the hydrant and may have needed more water as they were going to stretch more lines including a 2 1/2 defensive attack line.
Engine 6 was the 4th engine on scene at the time. Their job was to hook to the hydrant and their truck to take it to Engine 10 just incase they needed an extra flow of water due to them using 2 1/2 inch lines for their defensive attack. They didn't have urgency because what they were doing was not something that was needed immediately, it was just incase.
@@HCemergencybuff and that is when things go wrong. Everyone in the fire service knows you operate as you train. Train like you fight. Lack of urgency means complacency which leads to accidents or a LODD.
@@fireman19841 The crews actually never used the supply from E6 believe it or not. So whether they were fast or not, it was no use. You also have to factor in how winded the 2 are as they were just relived from fire attack. And I honestly want to know your mindset on this. What do you think they should’ve done??? Do you want them to run? Everyone knows there is now running on the firegrounds cause what does that lead to? Injury. Slow and steady wins the race.
Awesome video broski 😎 currently a Dispatcher for Tampa so love seeing whats going on on scene when Im on the radio talking to Command earned a new Subscriber
Our Rescue's hold no water
Couldn't understand her. Background noise interference.
When did EDC go to tones for calls? We haven't ran tones since the early 2000's
They don’t, it was just my little touch to the video 😂
hello how to get a patch Alabama fire buff i collect them as a hobby
Why did E6 lay a line from hydrant when they fire attack engine was on the other side of the structure
No other hydrants were accessible on the Alpha side of the structure and they wanted E6 to have a 5in supply ready to go because E10 was on the Alpha side as attack group 1 and they had already tapped the hydrant and may have needed more water as they were going to stretch more lines including a 2 1/2 defensive attack line.
How much water does the Rescue hold
The rescues hold no water. The rescue is an ambulance. If you're referring to the engine, it is 750 gallons of water.
That's a poor excuse for a attack engine only my thought
@@herbharnish3778 How much should it hold?
@@herbharnish3778
Okay Couch Captain 🙄
What street is this. I used to live on meadowbrook dr
Gomez and Ralston Beach Cr
@@HCemergencybuff never heard of those street
Duty, Honor….No Hustle or Urgency
Engine 6 was the 4th engine on scene at the time. Their job was to hook to the hydrant and their truck to take it to Engine 10 just incase they needed an extra flow of water due to them using 2 1/2 inch lines for their defensive attack. They didn't have urgency because what they were doing was not something that was needed immediately, it was just incase.
Thank you for the what not to do video
@@TomManning-cs4el What do you think they should have done?
@@HCemergencybuff and that is when things go wrong. Everyone in the fire service knows you operate as you train. Train like you fight. Lack of urgency means complacency which leads to accidents or a LODD.
@@fireman19841 The crews actually never used the supply from E6 believe it or not. So whether they were fast or not, it was no use. You also have to factor in how winded the 2 are as they were just relived from fire attack. And I honestly want to know your mindset on this. What do you think they should’ve done??? Do you want them to run? Everyone knows there is now running on the firegrounds cause what does that lead to? Injury. Slow and steady wins the race.
So when I joined the fire department did they have a coward position like these guys not wearing gear and scba on fire calls
🤡
Is this private fire service
This is a county fire service. No volunteers, all career.