Here's where you should go - www.euro-firefighter.com/ - to find what you want. Paul Grimwood has worked as a career firefighter both in the USA and in Europe, and has written a lot about the differences.
Well for one if your looking a bit more specific what area do you mean a paid company or a volunteer? a city company or a rural one because in each area we all have our differences responce time, equpiment and man power availibility ect and all of that causes up to bring our firefighters up from probies different and it definatally causes us to use much different tatics for example the only part of my town that has hydrants is main street for the rest of it we have to deal with the 1000 gals of water on our engine until either our tanker shows up or we have a alterative method to establish a water supply
in germany is the water supply no problem, 98% the street in a town has underground hydrants. in a small town, i could happens that you have a problem, but its very rare.
the water supply of one ounderground-hydrant is 430 gal / minute and in town every 100 m is an underground hydrant, so the water supply is no problem
at rural it coult be more often you have a problem with water supply, but all engine and tanker in germany can pump water from a sea or a river and have a minimum 430 gals of water on the engine, the new gerneration of engines have 530 gals of water.
the trainig from probie to firefighter, at volunteer and payed are the same?
what kind of training they have to make?
how long are the training and they have to stay in firefighter-academy?
Permalink Reply by Dave on January 9, 2009 at 9:06am
The city of Boston still has under ground hydrants. We call them Lowrey hydrants, very rarely used, but last i heard we still have roughly 300 of them.
until 5 years ago we check every hydrant in our town, now the water company make it and we have more time to make our job. i don´t know how much we have, but i look for the real number.
why you don´t use them, have you any problem with them?