We havent rode the tailboard for approx. 8 years. All of the trucks we have now are enclosed cabs. the only time we are on the tail board is when we are loading our supply lines up
The only folks riding the tailboards are actors in commercials like the one during the olympics. I think it was a Visa commercial and it was near the end where they show the FF's riding by. Pretty lame.
Ours are used during our "Santa Sunday" as we go around the neighborhoods passing out treats and driving "Santa" around on the top of the trucks., the fastest they go is 25, and they go with traffic if on a main road.
when I first became a firefighter in the early nineties we were still able to ride the " backstep", and as a junior this was really the only place you could ride, so as not to take up a pack seat. Learning to hit the hydrant and be able to ride backstep was one of the most exciting things to be able to do. I understand it's not safe to do , but man was it fun to ride back there, we had straps that were probably more for piece of mind. but looking around the side of the truck as we split traffic down the main roads thru town was definitely a thrill.our ladder truck had two spots all the way back there, you used to really get whipped up and down. on that truck you had to wear a ladder belt with a large pompier hook clipped into a hole drilled in the diamond plate.yeah real hi-tech, PS you'd better have your chinstrap on otherwise it was a good chance you'd lose your helmet on a pot hole or bump.
That's why I brought this up. Sure 20 years we still road tailboard legally. And I believe that when NFPA 1901 was rewritten about then, it was only recommended that apparatus that didn't meet the code should be replaced. Of course all new rigs had to meet this. I'm just wondering if there are VFDs that still have rigs without jump seats.