I love how all the wannabes come out to criticize how the firemen are doing the job. Reality is no one who’s commenting was there and knows what was going on. It’s a shame trolls are ruining the integrity of the bravest men with their 2 cent comments about which they don’t know!!
@@paulbraunstein2290 no no, how that piece is designed it can work to initial hoock up for the main line engine then a second engine can hoock up to the piece and boost the line, so where that water is coming out the front looking part there is a valve that can turn to change the flow that piece with the seals looks to be leaking more than typical
extricate 1 don’t take much water to steam someone... better safe then sorry, let the interior crew work at trying to save the house first. Plus ventilation holes on roof help
@@glennhuber4975 .. perfectly fine to hit visible fire on the exterior surface areas of a structure while a crew is inside working. Just need to be careful and use low pressure. Not suggesting push water inside, but surface fire on cladding, siding etc.
wow, yea, i just saw that. My theory is, he must be so damn cool and brilliant, that he's able to sit in his toy car and play with the lights, sirens, and radio. This def the first time i've seen a chief doing that for a working fire. When I was active, our chiefs actually got out of the car, and even put fire gear on. oh yea, the finishing touch is making sure that he brought his cool sunglasses with him..... probably the kind that cost $200 and block the same amount of UV light that a dollar store pair would. oh wait, even cooler......the backwards hat teenager look.
he was doing what command should do. stay away and let operations do their jobs. i know this first hand. i did it for the last 6 years. now i am retired as a deputy chief after 20 years of service.
Don't worry guys if we stand here and watch the front wall burn for another 10 minutes it will fall and then we can put the fire out from our front row seats that we are watching from--- pitiful
Mark Baker wow! Were you in this fire? Do you know what’s going on? NO! My advice, get an application, became a firefighter in your local, and run with them a year. THEN come back and try commenting on this
Judi Smith Yeah kinks in a hose like that can diminish the water supply by up to 30%. Might not seem like a lot but it is. It is always crucial that kinks in a main line or attack line are taken care of cause it can mean the difference of getting the fire under control or the fire getting out of control.
Not only does un-kinking the hose increase your incoming water pressure/GPM so will dressing the hydrant out properly. Utilizing the main discharge alone does not give you the full capacity of the hydrant. To get the maximum amount of water from the hydrant both auxiliary discharges need to be dressed and supplying the apparatus. When done correctly each auxiliary discharge will have either a hydrant valve (some refer to this as a ball valve or a 1/4 turn valve) or two rising stem gate valves. Of course from there either a single or dual 3 inch supply lines can be stretched to the apparatus. Either appliance allows the maximum capacity of water the hydrant can deliver to reach the apparatus. Doing this also allows for hose changes without closing the hydrant in the event of second arriving apparatus.
The end of then house is burning and none of the are putting water on it. Why? That small fire turned into a total destruction of the end of that house.
Michael Spinuzzi Yeah i totally agree with you. Im a Vol Firefighter in NC. We don't ever go that fast down a residential neighborhood. I think the engineer got a little too excited or he was under a lot of stress to get there. Either way he should've never gone that fast.
Judging how E13 showed up they shouldve came in at a more reasonable speed through that neighborhood because what if a little kid wanted to go see the fire and just ran out infront of the fire truck as it came in, Accidents happen this way. The driver has to slow down in a residential street otherwise he might run the risk of hitting another vehicle as it came out of a intersection or he might run the risk of hitting a child. Think safety first. You can risk a lot to get to a scene but to only find out that it was a small fire. Or you can risk a little and save a lot. No matter how big the emergency you never fly through a residential area like that. You dont have to agree with me but im just stating the obvious. Safety comes first.
Im gonna end the conversation here. First off. I love your collection of videos. I think your a great person and a good photographer, Lastly I want you to know that life is the most precious thing in the world. I hope you live your life to the fullest and that you have a many good years to come. Stay safe out there.
Michael Spinuzzi teach your kids to stay out of the road...…. when there is a fire the fire trucks have to get there fast..... as a parent that's your responsibility.....
From the jumping around in the video I got the feel of a fairly decent amount of time before water actually got on the fire, come on guys, and I feel there definitely should have been a second line stretched 2hixh didnt happen till basically the end of the operation, also poor placement of ladders and should have had more up. Not to not pick, I enjoyed the video well shot, so no issues there. Also liked that the, I assume, LT couldnt open the glass door from the inside.
COld COffee didn’t see the interior operations... there were people working inside , and adding water outside can scald a firefighter inside with steam.
Kevin Lemmerman sure and why would you know, I’d bet 1,000 dollars your not a firefighter, or even been one. Your conception of what a firefighter should do is stupid as your comment
Roof work without full PPE at around the 2:50 mark?! Did you see the smoke pushing hard out the gable vent? That fire was an inch below your boots. That roof deck gives way and you're toast, now your family gets to go to your funeral and death benefits won't be paid
I love how all the wannabes come out to criticize how the firemen are doing the job. Reality is no one who’s commenting was there and knows what was going on. It’s a shame trolls are ruining the integrity of the bravest men with their 2 cent comments about which they don’t know!!
somebody was having a bad day...
That little engine was hauling ass
Yeah and it ran the cone over
I guess you could say it was, "the little engine that could" >:)
FireFlash 🤣🤣
I no OK
Awesome video! I loved E13 entrance!
Could always spray water on it...
That's what they were doing inside.
Alex Hennessy that’s the idea, interior attack until it warrants exterior.
Nice work Ron
Great video Ron
thanks man
Was all firedepts vol at this fire or was there any pd there to
oh yeah the cops were there big time
Amazing footage
Bad connection on hydrant hope it didnt effect water pressure Ok no leak
They ought to tighten that connection.
Don Brinkman looked like the turn valve inside of that was bad, not the connection to the hydrant itself
@@paulbraunstein2290 no no, how that piece is designed it can work to initial hoock up for the main line engine then a second engine can hoock up to the piece and boost the line, so where that water is coming out the front looking part there is a valve that can turn to change the flow that piece with the seals looks to be leaking more than typical
Or get the giant kink out of the 5 inch feed.
That was a very well executed demolition. ;)
33lex55 waited for another armchair firefighter
😂😂😂😂
Why not some water to the insulation on the front of the house??
I believe a team was in making interior attack, no need for steam burns
hitting that fire on the outside with a quick shot would not have steamed anyone.
extricate 1 don’t take much water to steam someone... better safe then sorry, let the interior crew work at trying to save the house first. Plus ventilation holes on roof help
@@glennhuber4975 .. perfectly fine to hit visible fire on the exterior surface areas of a structure while a crew is inside working. Just need to be careful and use low pressure. Not suggesting push water inside, but surface fire on cladding, siding etc.
Nice work
Ron Roberts
I like the chief sitting in his car, AC on giving orders.
wow, yea, i just saw that. My theory is, he must be so damn cool and brilliant, that he's able to sit in his toy car and play with the lights, sirens, and radio. This def the first time i've seen a chief doing that for a working fire. When I was active, our chiefs actually got out of the car, and even put fire gear on. oh yea, the finishing touch is making sure that he brought his cool sunglasses with him..... probably the kind that cost $200 and block the same amount of UV light that a dollar store pair would. oh wait, even cooler......the backwards hat teenager look.
he was doing what command should do. stay away and let operations do their jobs. i know this first hand. i did it for the last 6 years. now i am retired as a deputy chief after 20 years of service.
Do firefighters cut holes in the roof to make the house burn down faster?
Mike K no it’s to let out gases and smoke to stop a flashover, and let interior crews try to out it out. Ok
Nice work keep it up 🚒🇺🇸
Thanks for your feedback
Don't worry guys if we stand here and watch the front wall burn for another 10 minutes it will fall and then we can put the fire out from our front row seats that we are watching from--- pitiful
Agreed
Mark Baker wow! Were you in this fire? Do you know what’s going on? NO! My advice, get an application, became a firefighter in your local, and run with them a year. THEN come back and try commenting on this
He’s right though , so
Good job guys everyone got to work up on the roof
Tony Battaglia
Anytime you are on the roof performing ventilation you also take a charged attack line.
Nice working job but after watching this video I saw several personal demonstrating unsafe and dangerous skills.
sport901000 like what?
like ventilating without eye protection or wearing gloves.
lol
As an incident safety officer, there were several times I cringed, especially on the roof.
Un-kinging that yellow hose may stop the hydrant from losing so much water. And what's with the guy and his dog?
The guy with the dog on the lawn was the homeowner.
Judi Smith Yeah kinks in a hose like that can diminish the water supply by up to 30%. Might not seem like a lot but it is. It is always crucial that kinks in a main line or attack line are taken care of cause it can mean the difference of getting the fire under control or the fire getting out of control.
Not only does un-kinking the hose increase your incoming water pressure/GPM so will dressing the hydrant out properly. Utilizing the main discharge alone does not give you the full capacity of the hydrant. To get the maximum amount of water from the hydrant both auxiliary discharges need to be dressed and supplying the apparatus. When done correctly each auxiliary discharge will have either a hydrant valve (some refer to this as a ball valve or a 1/4 turn valve) or two rising stem gate valves. Of course from there either a single or dual 3 inch supply lines can be stretched to the apparatus. Either appliance allows the maximum capacity of water the hydrant can deliver to reach the apparatus. Doing this also allows for hose changes without closing the hydrant in the event of second arriving apparatus.
RIT Irons Well said. Are you a volunteer or a Paid firefighter? Im a Volunteer firefighter in NC.
Both in the past. Volunteer only now. In NJ just across the river from the area of PA that this fire occurred in.
Water anyone?
Cool mo de rocks
This was practice - right?
smitty2868 your an asshole. Right?
The end of then house is burning and none of the are putting water on it. Why? That small fire turned into a total destruction of the end of that house.
Retired At Last because there were people inside , and putting water in the outside can steam over them and scald them bad
Slow your butt down. A Residential street is not a time to be flying. My kids are probably going to be standing outside watching this.
Michael Spinuzzi Yeah i totally agree with you. Im a Vol Firefighter in NC. We don't ever go that fast down a residential neighborhood. I think the engineer got a little too excited or he was under a lot of stress to get there. Either way he should've never gone that fast.
How did you determine how fast they were going? Do you have a speed radar pointed at your screen?
Judging how E13 showed up they shouldve came in at a more reasonable speed through that neighborhood because what if a little kid wanted to go see the fire and just ran out infront of the fire truck as it came in, Accidents happen this way. The driver has to slow down in a residential street otherwise he might run the risk of hitting another vehicle as it came out of a intersection or he might run the risk of hitting a child. Think safety first. You can risk a lot to get to a scene but to only find out that it was a small fire. Or you can risk a little and save a lot. No matter how big the emergency you never fly through a residential area like that. You dont have to agree with me but im just stating the obvious. Safety comes first.
Im gonna end the conversation here. First off. I love your collection of videos. I think your a great person and a good photographer, Lastly I want you to know that life is the most precious thing in the world. I hope you live your life to the fullest and that you have a many good years to come. Stay safe out there.
Michael Spinuzzi teach your kids to stay out of the road...…. when there is a fire the fire trucks have to get there fast..... as a parent that's your responsibility.....
Cool
From the jumping around in the video I got the feel of a fairly decent amount of time before water actually got on the fire, come on guys, and I feel there definitely should have been a second line stretched 2hixh didnt happen till basically the end of the operation, also poor placement of ladders and should have had more up. Not to not pick, I enjoyed the video well shot, so no issues there. Also liked that the, I assume, LT couldnt open the glass door from the inside.
COld COffee gee thanks for coming, there’s the door... goodbye!!
COld COffee didn’t see the interior operations... there were people working inside , and adding water outside can scald a firefighter inside with steam.
I dont understand...this team want stop fire or broks that house..😂😂😂😂
lmao one of the worst ff skills ive scene
Kevin Lemmerman sure and why would you know, I’d bet 1,000 dollars your not a firefighter, or even been one. Your conception of what a firefighter should do is stupid as your comment
Roof work without full PPE at around the 2:50 mark?! Did you see the smoke pushing hard out the gable vent? That fire was an inch below your boots. That roof deck gives way and you're toast, now your family gets to go to your funeral and death benefits won't be paid
Bob C I didn’t see anyone without ppe? Did I miss something.
Firefighters very bad