I am sure that this has been discussed before on here. But I am curious what tools you and your dept. use the most and find the most valuable to have on scene.
If the truck is going to be your mainline truck i would suggest putting this on it:
- Flashlights
- jaws and spreaders
- extinguishers
- extra hoses
- generator or inverter
- irons
Look into a Denver tool. My dept. just got two last fall and we love them. It serves as an axe, sledge, and short pike pole. As for the roll-up doors, we just took delivery of a new rescue-pumper in sept. equipped with them and no trouble so far, had a structure fire last month where everything had a good coat of ice on it and they worked fine.
The most important tool used on a fire scene is an easy choice and I would gladly debate this with anyone here....it is your head....Plain and simple.....Slow down and think BEFORE you act......Just my look at it anyways.....Paul
This is not a debate about that. I made a correction to my question. And I have never said anything against that. I agree completely. But I also am looking for what people use along the lines of hand and power tools.
Permalink Reply by FETC on February 7, 2009 at 12:49pm
Me personally as an officer, my past training /experience and my radio.
But the choosing the right tool for the right job would be my favorite.... My guys carry different tools for the many different incidents we respond to or the different structures involved.
Sorry it is vague but it is only correct answer.
If you were polling what tools are removed from a truck the most in the US Fire Service I would say, "The Irons"
Good question.... for years I always went to the halligan for my choice of keyless entry and wall breech and window opening...but last few years I have turned to the axe and tnt tool...my only complaint with the tnt tool is it is a beast to lug ..but there is nothing it can't open and that includes on MVA's....
We still carry the irons and tnts..pic heads..for rescue we have the support junk yard dogs..nice idea on those but need fine tuning.i think..we use hamatro for pumps for spreaders..my first company had plastic/fiberglass combo handled axes they were light and industructable awesome tools...I am currently researching a new halligan of sorts out there by stanely tools...its as long as a tnt tool but lot lighter has a awl tip a gas shut off in throat a pry bar tip and a flat head to hit or be hit..a noche for 5" coupling ..it was advertised in Fire Engineering about 3 months ago waiting for a rep to get to me with a show and tell date or sample tool if it does what it says we will be buying 2 for every apparatus..let ya all know how it is when and if i hear on it