used to watch this all the time when i was little, now as a fire service dispatcher i can proudly say this was one of my inspirations, thank you for uploading good sir!
I watched this video about 2 years ago and then ive been looking for it all week on youtube and I found it again, such a beautiful turn out,great video!
Gary Plastek First thing you're taught, after basic structure safety and nozzle handling, is "Don't rush!" They'd rather have everyone get suited and into the rigs _safely_ than have someone rush, fall, and get seriously injured. Believe me, it happens more than you'd think.
Gary Plastek Most calls have a first due apparatus, not that you should be crawling but you don't go sprinting and rushing, that's how mistakes get made and people get hurt. Move deliberately
Being a volunteer firefighter is not easy and wanna say thanks to them for even taking on the responsibility of being a volunteer firefighter good luck guys and wish you the best for your fire company
Unless it's changed since I moved, the Cleveland, MS VFD firemen use lights and sirens on their POV's...for many years, when the siren sounded, city ordinance was you pulled over to the side while the siren sounded...now, they've earned a Class 5 insurance rating...not bad for Volunteer!!!
Let's stop and honor and appreciate the paramedics and firemen who proudly serve us your service and time and efforts are deeply appreciated thanks they deserve alot of credit your service is deeply appreciated thanks don't work to hard appreciate you guys thanks you guys rock way to go stay safe and warm and dry out great job great catches as usual still going strong way to go ❤😂😂😅 !! Joe
+Tyler H Those are for the truck exhaust. They connect onto the trucks to keep the exhaust fumes out of the station. They are on a track system, so when the truck begins to leave the station, they loosen and eject. Much nicer than smelling diesel fumes prior to a fire call.
Are you serious? Do you know anything about fire stations? Here is a link to an article that shows them. www.fumeavent.com/fire-station-exhaust-removal (They are white in that article). Fire stations that have built in water fills would either use fire fittings to attach to the pump inlet(and have to be removed once full), or would have a hose drop down from the ceiling and fill into a hatch on top straight into the tank. They would NEVER leave a water line connected. If the truck pulled out of the station ,and the system did not eject, they would have a flooding problem.
And I might add, it allows the apparatus the ability to sit inside the station and run, without the toxic Diesel fumes from entering the air that the firefighters are breathing at the station.
4:55 was that gray car honking at the huge truck? Second qeustion, are only a selective group of volunteers allowed to have lights and sirens? Or do they choose not to?
They deserve alot of credit lets stop and honor and appreciate the paramedics and firemen who proudly serve us your service and time and efforts are deeply appreciated thanks appreciated thanks don't work to hard appreciate you guys thanks you guys rock stay safe and warm out there great job great catches as usual still going strong keep up them safe out there !! ❤❤😂😅 Joe
Thank You Heroes and Heroins, "ESPECIALLY" to those Volunteers that go out on some very dangerous calls with out receiving financial compensation. But I'm sure that to you Good Folks, saving lives is compensation enough ! Bless You All" !
the rules are sinple volunteer or not and being part of the law enforcement and fire department family for so many years since the 50's or so Let’s assume a caller dials 9-1-1, and the phone is answered. START THE CLOCK NOW! This is absolutely when response times start. The Dispatch needs to immediately page out the necessary agencies and resources. One the page goes out Fire fighters/EMS are required volunteer or not are to Jump Out of bed responding to the call. They have Just 15 minutes to get from the bed to the vehicle turn out gear to the car full response (Personal own Vehicle) To either the scene or station based on the location. Most departments are not quick enough to respond Every second counts some agencies refuses to respond and show up.
Safety First Wow that is slow. In the UK retained (on call) only have six minutes for the appliance to be out of the doors from time of call. That equates to living or working within one and a half miles of the station. Any further and you don't get a job. Most of us regard a sense of urgency as second nature as we have a duty to the public. Dawdle and as long as they have a crew then you miss the appliance.
Lol well that would suck wouldn't it? But they've only got about a dozen firefighters on those three trucks, and there's a good chance of them needing more personnel than that. I am always amazed that some volunteer halls are left wide-open while the apparatus is gone, but I guess it's a small town and anyone caught stealing from the volunteer fire department would get lynched. Lol
Did anyone notice the utility pickup sitting in the back from f the bays. Any guy who came after the guy in the jeep probably either took it with him or drove to the call in their POV.
+elilovestrains no it is not suppose to be that and it is in mississippi picayune i think id have to ask ym ex who gets out the passenger side of the dodge charger car black one
Where does the house siren noise come from? All I know is that it's an electronic siren, in google earth I can't see a siren at all. Anyone know where it's coming from?
weirdest sounding siren have heard in a very long time, I actually have a station where every day at straight up noontime their siren goes off, and even though it's quite loud, you actually get used to it after a while.......I have also always like the idea of putting those yellow tubes on your truck's exaust pipes, so when you run them inside of the station and you have the front doors closed, it wont fill the inside of the station with smoke, if homeowners could get something like that, it sure would make being able to warm up their vehicles in the morning a heck of a lot easier while they are still in the garage....let me guess the guy who drove up in the pickup truck had to be a cheif, only becasue he had the strobe light bar on top of his truck......
I do have a question in regarding their bunker gears can they take their equipment home since they are volunteers I'm sure they have their own equipment that they can take it home so when there is a call they can put on gear and go the station jump on the apparatus and go.
+The Nordic Stag Having lived in the area growing up I heard the old siren used to call volunteers many times. It had that "air raid" siren timbre. Very distinctive sound. This new one is just annoying.
It was like an electric kind of fakeish air raid siren not a real classic one that used air flow to create the siren it could have been dying or because it was most likely electric it could have been the natural sound
according to a busy of mine, they use that siren specifically because the sound doesn't travel nearly as far, and is used to simply alert the paid drivers
+The Nordic Stag I live a few minutes from Merion, the SelecTone is simply there as a street clearing siren because its on a busy street in Ardmore. Down the street at Bryn Mawr fire company, they still use an STL-10 for fire calls though.
***** Well for starters it's illegal in all 50 states.... secondly, Ever stop to think they might want to fill the trucks back up after the call? Or what if they want to use the station as a fill station for Tankers?
LOVE THE LITTLE ONE WHO CAME OUT THE DODGE CHARGER ON THE PASSENGER SIDE CAUSE HIS NAME IS JOHN AND HE MY EX BUT HE AWESOME AND I LOVE HIM AND HE GREAT. LOVE U JOHN FOREVER AND ALWAYS.
Craig Nicholas A chief in a POV could arrive sooner than the engine company and give a good size up and report of conditions. This could help dispatch extra resources earlier. Also the chief can come up with a plan so that when the engine company does arrive, they can get straight to work, rather than standing around waiting.
Hola a tod@s,no pongo en duda la valentia el arrojo y voluntad de estos bomberos,pero la respuesta a la llamada,creo yo que es muy lenta,seguramente sean voluntarios al no haber cuerpo profesional,que conste que la labor de estos valientes,no se paga ni con oro
Just remember those slow people don't get paid like you do , they don't go on strike like you do they get no benefits from the city. your sitting at the station waiting for the alarm people here have to drive to the station
I was a volunteer I never got benefits from the township well never got paid went to fire fighting school and a few other classes they paid for. be wanted something better than what the fire dept had we bought it for ourselves. I was not intending that this fire dept was slow was talking about volunteer vs paid city depts. Oh we could get a engine out in less than 5 minutes but most people have to travel from work that is 2-10 miles away that's why mutual aid is called in on fires
could they be any slower? wow, the time between the 1st engine leaving to finally the last is unbelievable. Glad my house is not covered by this department, would have burned down by the time all the trucks arrived.
+Anthony Thomas Zigmund Just in case youre wondering, bud: 1. This department is volunteer. Dont like? Feel free to stop by there and tell the chief personally how you would fix all of their problems... 2. This is more than likely a fire alarm response. AKA Single company response. A building fire response adds at least one more company. 3. Youre house wouldnt burn down, dude. The only time houses actually burn down from fires is when the fire is well advanced before 911 is even called. 4. The average response time for ONE truck from a volunteer department in the US is 5 minutes from dispatch, these guys had two out in that time. So, in conclusion, youre an entitled asshole who probably has never spent a single second on a fire call. Stop bashing the guys who volunteer their time and safety for you.
The average NON live in Volunteer Fire Dept is 3-5 minutes, we come from all over our Community, or further esp if we have to work and come to the station. We also should NOT be speeding to station, we do no good if we are hurt or hurt someone, so you may be able to leave in under 5 but thats average in most depts.
M Fest it matters because a paid FD is out the door rolling while a Yolk is rolling out of bed! You never know how many FF's will show and that all adds up to delay!
5 years ago, I randomly put this on my watch later. Here I am now, first ever time viewing this.
Haha, that's wonderful! It's still relevant as the station is there with the same siron.
used to watch this all the time when i was little, now as a fire service dispatcher i can proudly say this was one of my inspirations, thank you for uploading good sir!
🫡🫡🫡
it's great seeing so many active volunteers in the community, these guys are the real hero's
First-class work! Many greetings from the fire companions from Berlin/Brandenburg - Germany.
Eigenjagd2007 potttttgtt
I watched this video about 2 years ago and then ive been looking for it all week on youtube and I found it again, such a beautiful turn out,great video!
I love t6he car at 3:13 that pulls up lights and sirens and blocks the fire hydrant... LOL
Haha
Got to love it as some of the firefighters just casually walked into the station.
Gary Plastek First thing you're taught, after basic structure safety and nozzle handling, is "Don't rush!" They'd rather have everyone get suited and into the rigs _safely_ than have someone rush, fall, and get seriously injured. Believe me, it happens more than you'd think.
Gary Plastek Most calls have a first due apparatus, not that you should be crawling but you don't go sprinting and rushing, that's how mistakes get made and people get hurt. Move deliberately
Gary Plastek What good is a firefighter with a busted head from tripping and falling? Never rush, and don't speed when in your personal vehicle.
Mathew Festoff
Gary Plastek Fools rush in.
Our town relies on volunteers only, and in the 100+ years this town has been here, the volunteers got 'em all, Good Work volunteers do!
Being a volunteer firefighter is not easy and wanna say thanks to them for even taking on the responsibility of being a volunteer firefighter good luck guys and wish you the best for your fire company
That last guy though. He's just like, What did I miss?
The firefighter that was in the black Jeep at the end was probably like GOD DAMNIT as his engine leaves.
Bro that Dodge car coming in looked badass!!!
Eastern Pennsylvania Fire he should’ve kept it, sad to see it go was beautiful
Unless it's changed since I moved, the Cleveland, MS VFD firemen use lights and sirens on their POV's...for many years, when the siren sounded, city ordinance was you pulled over to the side while the siren sounded...now, they've earned a Class 5 insurance rating...not bad for Volunteer!!!
I absolutely love the air horn and Q siren! When we respond our engines air runs out of air when we go through town
Runs out of air? Isn't there an air compressor that's driven by the engine? I thought that was how such things worked?
I doesn't have enough time to fill back up but yeah eventually it fills back up. Just takes little while.
That is exactly what the siren is. It activates when the company is dispatched and rings for 2 or 3 minutes, just so that there is a local alarm.
In every department there is that one or those few that always miss the trucks!
They sure have some nice equipment!
Let's stop and honor and appreciate the paramedics and firemen who proudly serve us your service and time and efforts are deeply appreciated thanks they deserve alot of credit your service is deeply appreciated thanks don't work to hard appreciate you guys thanks you guys rock way to go stay safe and warm and dry out great job great catches as usual still going strong way to go ❤😂😂😅 !! Joe
Gotta love how an Officer pulls up in his POV, and parks right on the Sidewalk, in front of the Hydrant !!!!
Wasn't an Officer
Oh really ? If not an Officer, then why was he using Red Lights, and Siren on his POV ?
What those yellow hanging hose like objects that detached from the vehicles
+Tyler H Those are for the truck exhaust. They connect onto the trucks to keep the exhaust fumes out of the station. They are on a track system, so when the truck begins to leave the station, they loosen and eject. Much nicer than smelling diesel fumes prior to a fire call.
+planofootball09 oh ok thanks
planofootball09 no there not,
water pump through them to refuel the water tanks in the trucks.
Are you serious? Do you know anything about fire stations? Here is a link to an article that shows them. www.fumeavent.com/fire-station-exhaust-removal (They are white in that article). Fire stations that have built in water fills would either use fire fittings to attach to the pump inlet(and have to be removed once full), or would have a hose drop down from the ceiling and fill into a hatch on top straight into the tank. They would NEVER leave a water line connected. If the truck pulled out of the station ,and the system did not eject, they would have a flooding problem.
And I might add, it allows the apparatus the ability to sit inside the station and run, without the toxic Diesel fumes from entering the air that the firefighters are breathing at the station.
4:55 was that gray car honking at the huge truck?
Second qeustion, are only a selective group of volunteers allowed to have lights and sirens? Or do they choose not to?
Many people choose not to because it makes them a target.
Tom Lock A target for what?
Douglas Muth Terrible driving phone calls I can imagine. Had it happen to me once in a Tanker and once in the Chiefs vehicle. That was a good laugh.
PA doesnt allow sirens. And a blue light is optional, but most of those members dont have seeing as the live right down the street.
Thanks
They deserve alot of credit lets stop and honor and appreciate the paramedics and firemen who proudly serve us your service and time and efforts are deeply appreciated thanks appreciated thanks don't work to hard appreciate you guys thanks you guys rock stay safe and warm out there great job great catches as usual still going strong keep up them safe out there !! ❤❤😂😅 Joe
is this in PA
Yep, it's in Ardmore which is just outside of Philly.
rharkinson bhh
rharkinson q.
r9÷¥¥)200harkinsonר22ר😧😧😨😧😧😧-2 =
Hajnalka Kalmár dbvf
Thank You Heroes and Heroins, "ESPECIALLY" to those Volunteers that go out on some very dangerous calls with out receiving financial compensation. But I'm sure that to you Good Folks, saving lives is compensation enough ! Bless You All" !
They are awesome fire unites responding to the call.
Love that ladder with the Q and 8V-92!!
the rules are sinple volunteer or not and being part of the law enforcement and fire department family for so many years since the 50's or so Let’s assume a caller dials 9-1-1, and the phone is answered. START THE CLOCK NOW! This is absolutely when response times start. The Dispatch needs to immediately page out the necessary agencies and resources. One the page goes out Fire fighters/EMS are required volunteer or not are to Jump Out of bed responding to the call. They have Just 15 minutes to get from the bed to the vehicle turn out gear to the car full response (Personal own Vehicle) To either the scene or station based on the location.
Most departments are not quick enough to respond Every second counts some agencies refuses to respond and show up.
Safety First IQPQG VWOWEU
Safety First Wow that is slow. In the UK retained (on call) only have six minutes for the appliance to be out of the doors from time of call. That equates to living or working within one and a half miles of the station. Any further and you don't get a job. Most of us regard a sense of urgency as second nature as we have a duty to the public. Dawdle and as long as they have a crew then you miss the appliance.
What is that yellow hose at 1:46? seems like its attached to the engine?
It's an exhaust removal system so the trucks may be safely run inside the station. They are designed to pop off as the trucks leave.
Harry Jarin thanks!
+Harry Jarin b98
TheSamoloot because it is attached
PuLsE_ levity dKSHWI A 5
What are all of firefighters responding too??????
During a on call emergency, you can park wherever,as long as not in the equipments response area...ie..on a lawn driveway, etc...lol
I love how 9 years later I'm still getting comments on this video. I legit had no idea it would be this popular!
Is this like a stand by staishin or something
Not sure what you mean, but this is in a heavily populated suburb, so most of the firefighters would live 5-10 minutes away.
God bless the volunteers! one of America's most precious resources...Thanks for this upload!
Noce response! Love how the rigs are pierce. And great Q wprk.
so what did the guy in the black jeep do?did he cancel and leave? or did he play firehouse guard till they got back?
No he grabs his bunker gear and drives his personal vehicle to the scene.
Mark LC oh, ty for informing, i always figured there d be 1 guy that guarded and cleaned the house till they got back.
Lol well that would suck wouldn't it? But they've only got about a dozen firefighters on those three trucks, and there's a good chance of them needing more personnel than that.
I am always amazed that some volunteer halls are left wide-open while the apparatus is gone, but I guess it's a small town and anyone caught stealing from the volunteer fire department would get lynched. Lol
Did anyone notice the utility pickup sitting in the back from f the bays. Any guy who came after the guy in the jeep probably either took it with him or drove to the call in their POV.
I can barely make out what appears to be headlights and a grille. I wouldn't have been able to tell you it was a vehicle.
Every one of their trucks is full or near full! Great turnout!
The Pierce ladder is no longer in service as Ladder 25. A Spartan has replaced it.
No, I started the video just as the siren shut down. It was going for a few minutes beforehand.
do you mean Marion or where is this ?
+elilovestrains no it is not suppose to be that and it is in mississippi picayune i think id have to ask ym ex who gets out the passenger side of the dodge charger car black one
+elilovestrains Merion is here in PA, the same Merion as Merion golf club, which the US Open has been held several times.
Are the FFs assigned to specific rigs are is the protocol to just jump on the next rig out the door??
Different companies have different protocols
In my department the ladder truck is always first out when it's due
@douglas muth what alarm is this
What model siren is that? Never heard the like before.
Sounds like a Federal Modulator. That particular model also has voice notification capabilities
FiregroundAudio
Ah yes; thank you.
+infinitecanadian It is a Federal SelecTone actually.
It's more of a ati siren
Where does the house siren noise come from? All I know is that it's an electronic siren, in google earth I can't see a siren at all. Anyone know where it's coming from?
weirdest sounding siren have heard in a very long time, I actually have a station where every day at straight up noontime their siren goes off, and even though it's quite loud, you actually get used to it after a while.......I have also always like the idea of putting those yellow tubes on your truck's exaust pipes, so when you run them inside of the station and you have the front doors closed, it wont fill the inside of the station with smoke, if homeowners could get something like that, it sure would make being able to warm up their vehicles in the morning a heck of a lot easier while they are still in the garage....let me guess the guy who drove up in the pickup truck had to be a cheif, only becasue he had the strobe light bar on top of his truck......
were this at
Wow 2 mins out of the station for the first truck. That's like the road time for the call
I'm just curious how do they know which equipment they are assigned to or they just take whatever equipment that they need for the call
I do have a question in regarding their bunker gears can they take their equipment home since they are volunteers I'm sure they have their own equipment that they can take it home so when there is a call they can put on gear and go the station jump on the apparatus and go.
Ardmore Bryn and Merion fire services in what state?
I belive this is in the Philly area in PA
Ok thanks!
its a modulater i love those sirens
love the guy in the black car parking in front of the hydrant.
The hell kind of siren is that for the station..?
Well yeah I know that; but what -kind- is it..? Definitely not mechanical, not any electronic I've heard before either.
+The Nordic Stag Having lived in the area growing up I heard the old siren used to call volunteers many times. It had that "air raid" siren timbre. Very distinctive sound. This new one is just annoying.
It was like an electric kind of fakeish air raid siren not a real classic one that used air flow to create the siren it could have been dying or because it was most likely electric it could have been the natural sound
according to a busy of mine, they use that siren specifically because the sound doesn't travel nearly as far, and is used to simply alert the paid drivers
+The Nordic Stag I live a few minutes from Merion, the SelecTone is simply there as a street clearing siren because its on a busy street in Ardmore. Down the street at Bryn Mawr fire company, they still use an STL-10 for fire calls though.
6:38 he just missed the truck 😂😂😂😂
That's the worst...
that was amazing six minutes and they were all gone
Federal Selectone. The tone generator sucks, you can hear it stepping down the hertz.
What kind of call did they have? Is this in PA?
HAZMAT FireGuy yes this is in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania
If you had a scanner and included the fire audio with the video, it'd be even better. Good job catching the entire response though.
Is there a minimum crew level before they can turn out?
were they responding to the house fire?
Just under 5 min. for the 2nd out, kind of slow in my playbook...aside of that, great video!
firebrigade101 webw
plain English.
How's 5 minutes out bad for a 2nd out truck?
Love how that Black Charger is parked in front of your hydrant....
***** Well for starters it's illegal in all 50 states.... secondly, Ever stop to think they might want to fill the trucks back up after the call? Or what if they want to use the station as a fill station for Tankers?
+Sup3r6f0ur Same. Also i accuse Benjamin Webber of stealing my ideas
+haligan1 25
+haligan1 25
White coat white helmet must be an officer. Possibly assistant chief or chie
I believe its the new electronic siren that replaces the old wind up ones
do they have a modulator siren
3:10 i like how the chief parks in front of the hydrant
THAT last volunteer... SHIT i missed them
But in all likelyhood, he probably grabbed his gear and went to the scene himself
at the end when the jeep pulls up i paused it and it looks like there is still one more truck it is just hard to see
or it is the rack for the bunker gear
Is this a volunteer fire department
In my Dept. it's 2 or 3 depending on the call and the apparatus responding.
fantastic
lovin the black charger ifo the hydrant.
That modulator is glitchy as heck!
LOVE THE LITTLE ONE WHO CAME OUT THE DODGE CHARGER ON THE PASSENGER SIDE CAUSE HIS NAME IS JOHN AND HE MY EX BUT HE AWESOME AND I LOVE HIM AND HE GREAT. LOVE U JOHN FOREVER AND ALWAYS.
if u listen closely u can hear a siren going off on the distance
no he didnt get left behind he just missed the apparatus so he will most likely respond in his personal vehicle
for a fire station the building is well designed.
Eww… I can hear that siren’s individual pitch steps…
Where is Ardmore? I thought it was a street in Los Angeles in Koreatown.
10 miles west of Philadelphia along route 30. It's quite a nice suburb.
Douglas Muth
+DaveWVideo Ardmore is located in wynnewood, PA, 19096. If you are asking. Also, for some people they say that ardmore used to be athensville.
+Havard Castiglioni Next to Wynnewood. Our ZIP code is 19003.
It was known as Athensville in years past, though!
+Havard Castiglioni actually, ardmore is a section of Lower Merion Township in Montgomery County, PA.
Sounds like they need a new station alerting siren never heard one like that before
At 3:10, The guy parked in front of a Hydrant
When I called the Fire department I live right in front of it comes straight when they get the message not unprepared taking 3mins to go
if the chief has his own car with light and siren why did he not go straight to the secene just asking
What can u in a Pov on scene nothing it was smart to come to the station in case he needed to drive an engine
Craig Nicholas
A chief in a POV could arrive sooner than the engine company and give a good size up and report of conditions. This could help dispatch extra resources earlier. Also the chief can come up with a plan so that when the engine company does arrive, they can get straight to work, rather than standing around waiting.
i hated it when that happened. so close to the engine house and the truck goes in route.
What merry Christmas?
Ardmore Engine 25 & Ladder 25 Responding to a Car Crash
Hola a tod@s,no pongo en duda la valentia el arrojo y voluntad de estos bomberos,pero la respuesta a la llamada,creo yo que es muy lenta,seguramente sean voluntarios al no haber cuerpo profesional,que conste que la labor de estos valientes,no se paga ni con oro
My ears hurt from that speaker
Imagine how the trucks felt!
Douglas Muth I’m talking about the so called siren they have to alert the volunteers
Just remember those slow people don't get paid like you do , they don't go on strike like you do they get no benefits from the city. your sitting at the station waiting for the alarm people here have to drive to the station
Well to be fair the Department of Labor does give compensation to volunteers, So yes they do get benefits.
Tim Stewart I missed that part.
I was a volunteer I never got benefits from the township well never got paid went to fire fighting school and a few other classes they paid for. be wanted something better than what the fire dept had we bought it for ourselves. I was not intending that this fire dept was slow was talking about volunteer vs paid city depts. Oh we could get a engine out in less than 5 minutes but most people have to travel from work that is 2-10 miles away that's why mutual aid is called in on fires
I
de
qmzaaq fddzstzertgf dxvbtvghhb🅱🅱♉
L'un et les il m! Lol par olloooomo
Ml
cool
Eh, he was responding to an emergency so I put it in the same category as cops speeding to get to a call.
This is how you dump the house.
I like your videos
the jeep at the end😂 you missed that run bud.... First in first out... Last in.... Welp your fucked lol
could they be any slower? wow, the time between the 1st engine leaving to finally the last is unbelievable. Glad my house is not covered by this department, would have burned down by the time all the trucks arrived.
+Anthony Thomas Zigmund Just in case youre wondering, bud:
1. This department is volunteer. Dont like? Feel free to stop by there and tell the chief personally how you would fix all of their problems...
2. This is more than likely a fire alarm response. AKA Single company response. A building fire response adds at least one more company.
3. Youre house wouldnt burn down, dude. The only time houses actually burn down from fires is when the fire is well advanced before 911 is even called.
4. The average response time for ONE truck from a volunteer department in the US is 5 minutes from dispatch, these guys had two out in that time.
So, in conclusion, youre an entitled asshole who probably has never spent a single second on a fire call. Stop bashing the guys who volunteer their time and safety for you.
oh nvm it is merion
Oh my good yes over?
iff i whas a boss i cud giv them a flye out from the station and say do newer come back no mor
What? Is that English you're speaking?
i have problems with som words spelling somtimes
I don't think you could ever be a boss with that spelling. Like wtf are you even trying to say.
thats firefighter was just 10 seconds 2 late
Howard Vanderhoff I thought he was 10 seconds too late.
Havard Castiglioni i was responding to an ems call when i was watching this video i typed fast used a few slang words and terms
Woah, There's no need for arguments
+Havard Castiglioni Well you kinda warranted a response..
First of all, i didn't do this, and second it was howard vanderhoff who typed random numbers
The Black Charger Blocking a Fire Hydrant??? WHat is up with that???
Is it just me or does that q sound strange?
We can be at the station and leave under that 5 mins
First apparatus was away in 1 minute 55, and the aerial was away just under five mins. What, two out of three not good enough for you?
The average NON live in Volunteer Fire Dept is 3-5 minutes, we come from all over our Community, or further esp if we have to work and come to the station.
We also should NOT be speeding to station, we do no good if we are hurt or hurt someone, so you may be able to leave in under 5 but thats average in most depts.
+Firefighter K. W
o
Me and about 2-3 other guys are standby At the station almost all the time and are out of there when we get a call in 1:30 MAX.
M Fest it matters because a paid FD is out the door rolling while a Yolk is rolling out of bed! You never know how many FF's will show and that all adds up to delay!