First Due Machinists
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Structure Fire 700 Block O Neal
Structure Fire 700 Block O Neal
zhlédnutí: 191

Video

The Halligan
zhlédnutí 1,5KPřed 3 lety
Not all Halligan‘s are made the same. In this video we look at several different Halligan designs from the forks to the adz, the pike and even the construction. Having the right tool can mean the difference between success or failure for your tactical objectives.
Mortise Cylinder Lock
zhlédnutí 177Před 3 lety
Once a cylinder is removed from a mortise cylinder lock, the easiest technique to collapse the deadbolt is to push then sweep.
City of Newberry Passport System
zhlédnutí 516Před 3 lety
This is a look at the accountability system used by the City of Newberry Fire Department.
Alpha Company Engine School
zhlédnutí 444Před 3 lety
Alpha Company Engine School
Balloon Frame Construction Fire Demonstration
zhlédnutí 1,5KPřed 3 lety
In this video we look at the effects of fire conditions on balloon frame construction we are able to look at thermal degradation, the use of a thermal imaging camera to see through the walls and we’re able to see fire torching or below torching once the fuel mixture is ignited at the exhaust.
Hose Management
zhlédnutí 941Před 3 lety
Crews demonstrate techniques for hose Management to include the Hip, Lock and Clamp techniques.
Airbag deployment
zhlédnutí 34KPřed 3 lety
A brief look at airbags and how they affect us during extrications.
Ground ladders
zhlédnutí 287Před 3 lety
Crews demonstrate different ladder caries and demonstrate the three window drill.
Water Mapping and Entrainment
zhlédnutí 2,7KPřed 3 lety
Crews use an acquired structure to look at the effects of water mapping in residential structures. Crew also perform Entrainment tests with both smooth bore and fog nozzles.
Forcible Entry Techniques
zhlédnutí 265Před 3 lety
The crew utilizes an acquired residential structure to demonstrate forcible entry techniques that can be used on any door.
Extrication Dash Lift or Roll Techniques
zhlédnutí 7KPřed 3 lety
The crew gains access to structural supports for easy dash lift or dash roll extrication techniques.
Extrication side blowout
zhlédnutí 1KPřed 3 lety
The crew demonstrates a side blowout for easy patient access.
Modified roof removal
zhlédnutí 175Před 3 lety
The crew demonstrates a modified roof removal to gain access to patients with limited manpower.
Developing Can Confidence
zhlédnutí 411Před 3 lety
Take a look at the capabilities of the water can, when used within it’s parameters it can be one of the most effective options for crews.
Rapid Intervention Team (RIT) Drill
zhlédnutí 23KPřed 3 lety
Rapid Intervention Team (RIT) Drill
Dollhouse Prop
zhlédnutí 1,4KPřed 3 lety
Dollhouse Prop
Mind the Vent
zhlédnutí 89Před 3 lety
Mind the Vent
Line of Sight Firefighting
zhlédnutí 163Před 3 lety
Line of Sight Firefighting
Making the Stretch
zhlédnutí 132Před 3 lety
Making the Stretch
The limitations of Thermal Imaging
zhlédnutí 209Před 3 lety
The limitations of Thermal Imaging
Scorpion Load
zhlédnutí 271Před 3 lety
Scorpion Load
Hose Loads and Deployment
zhlédnutí 46KPřed 3 lety
Hose Loads and Deployment
Kentland Load
zhlédnutí 17KPřed 3 lety
Kentland Load
High Rise Loads
zhlédnutí 173Před 3 lety
High Rise Loads
Through the lock entry
zhlédnutí 63Před 3 lety
Through the lock entry
Nozzle Selection
zhlédnutí 8KPřed 3 lety
Nozzle Selection
Newberry Load
zhlédnutí 193Před 3 lety
Newberry Load
Hose line Failure
zhlédnutí 123Před 3 lety
Hose line Failure
Controlling the Room
zhlédnutí 167Před 4 lety
Controlling the Room

Komentáře

  • @malotix
    @malotix Před 7 měsíci

    Great video, thank you!

  • @crazyleyland5106
    @crazyleyland5106 Před 9 měsíci

    The dummy looks completely different from UK fire dummies. I wondered why he had no lower legs, or hands.

  • @joshuahollar9880
    @joshuahollar9880 Před 9 měsíci

    Thank you for the video!

  • @hectoralayon2758
    @hectoralayon2758 Před 10 měsíci

    Nigga

  • @kbittorf335
    @kbittorf335 Před 10 měsíci

    Great work! We had one 1 1/2” mystery nozzle back in the day. Named such as it flowed more in fog than straight stream. Twist on, twist off. That thing ran wild on the fire ground many times after being dropped. Kept trying to get rid of it, but then the next fire it would end up being an attack line!

  • @unhookedunhooked3219

    In the UK we teach to never put your BA set through the opening before yourself and always go through feet first.

  • @mltndeal5120
    @mltndeal5120 Před rokem

    I was volunteer fireman for at least 6 years. We used to do a lot of live smoke house training. One day we had a new captain with our fire department and we were doing this type of exercise without a blindfold and without the oxygen on on our scba my scba mask started to fog up and I couldn't breathe. So I moved my mask partially open to get some outside air and our captain got angry and made a big issue about it. I defended myself because we didn't have our scba on. After that I resigned and left the department because an inexperienced firefighter wiggled his way to the Captain position quickly. I had lots of certifications and lots of firefighting experience despite that the fire chief at the time sided with the Captain and I totally thought it was all about politics. But that aside I done a lot of Wildland Firefightind which I was getting paid for for 6 seasons. If there was ever an opening at the fire department I would apply for chief position. And I would have these types of training for the young firefighters. I would not push it on the volunteers to do live smokehouse training because it's very hazardous. I've been to real structure fires and I was an interior guy and because I was certified firefighter 2 the chief always told me and a fellow fireman to search the interior but it was very unpredictable and scary thankfully we never got injured. To tell you the truth from my experience from fighting real structure fires there were so much clutter in people's homes that it was unpredictable what would be in your way. It was very dark and smokie it was like going into hell's gate 😱. The structures we had were only one story buildings and if the residents were all accounted for we didn't have to do search and rescue going interior. I overcame a lot of fear. Our fire department is in a rural part of Arizona, on the Navajo Reservation.... We never had to rescue trapped victims thankfully. Only one time in my tenure with the fire department we had three victims burn to death, we got there too late because the fire was reported late by the family members. We just did a search and recovery of three bodies. That memory still in my head, but somehow I never had nightmares about it. I hope you all read my comments be careful out there current firefighters be safe, training is vital. In real fires there's no time to panic. If you can purchase thermal imaging for your departments it's very dark in real fires and very hot.

  • @Striker744
    @Striker744 Před rokem

    Thanks a lot for the video!

  • @BigDuke-md8ec
    @BigDuke-md8ec Před rokem

    WTF is with the extra 18 inch length of chin strap ?

    • @firstduemachinists5146
      @firstduemachinists5146 Před rokem

      Makes for a fast mask up. I leave my face-piece clipped into my regulator. Face-piece to face (through chin strap), helmet drops to the arm holding the face-piece, tighten straps, hood and helmet on and roll on. Not for everyone but I have liked it.

  • @eshcoldp1368
    @eshcoldp1368 Před 2 lety

    Great job lads and very well explained. --God bless

  • @irish_saltdog8891
    @irish_saltdog8891 Před 2 lety

    We use this hose load on our bumper lines for our engines they’re usually about 200 feet

  • @shaneb8781
    @shaneb8781 Před 2 lety

    all i hear is the camera guys heavy breathing.....

  • @CalebsLifestyle
    @CalebsLifestyle Před 2 lety

    He should come up with a strategy for his escape room to keep it from falling out and his door chocks from coming off his helmet and they need so slow down. Smooth is Slow is Fast

  • @franccvcescopaderi1980

    Xdftuoiy

  • @vancemcculla6705
    @vancemcculla6705 Před 3 lety

    What do you use for your fuel in the burn room? And how do you have it set up? And do you put fuel anywhere else in the dollhouse? We had one built and we’ve been playing with it, but we are having issues getting it to do what the wood ones do, any suggestions? Thank you!

    • @firstduemachinists5146
      @firstduemachinists5146 Před 3 lety

      Hey there Vance, we use OSB as our fuel most of the time but we have found that the if you want very flammable smoke you need some nasty smoke. Small blocks of foam and Poly will help make the smoke that helps demonstrate flammability. Another thing that you have to have is enough heat that the smoke is readily ignited. We usually fuel load (with OSB and foam) the bottom two compartments, we have also fuel loaded the top right compartment but that’s not our norm. Hope this is helpful for you guys. Stay safe and keep perfecting the trade!

    • @vancemcculla6705
      @vancemcculla6705 Před 3 lety

      Awesome!! Thank you for the info! We will give that a try!

    • @pspfirechief
      @pspfirechief Před rokem

      Friend, would you give me some videos of your room inner, please . It makes me curious that it get flashover and backdraft progress, even its metal matterial. Commonly its osb material. Nice to know that❤

  • @redarashad8833
    @redarashad8833 Před 3 lety

    تت

  • @mrbroclips3333
    @mrbroclips3333 Před 3 lety

    That is Takata airbags

  • @rescue3rg
    @rescue3rg Před 3 lety

    Gibboey

  • @rescue3rg
    @rescue3rg Před 3 lety

    Kaiden

  • @veraluciamoura7902
    @veraluciamoura7902 Před 3 lety

    Troca oi.

  • @matthewechols9429
    @matthewechols9429 Před 3 lety

    Good video! Great info and explained well! From one firefighter to another stay safe brother!

  • @ritirons2726
    @ritirons2726 Před 3 lety

    As a long time RIT instructor, I have a number of observations to pass along. In no way are they meant to offend or to provide negative criticism so please don’t take them that way. First, Firefighters should avoid (in my opinion only, never) removing their SCBA. At most, they should train to reduce their profile by loosening the waist and shoulder straps and rotating the SCBA to their side combined with their body positioning to fit through the opening. The loss of control of a member’s SCBA can have deadly consequences. Members should be discouraged from utilizing openings that would require them to remove any of their equipment and should train to use their tools to enlarge the opening or find another way in. If members have difficulty accessing an area, they certainly do not want the same difficulties in the event they have to evacuate quickly. Also, as proven in the video, the first team member made it through the initial obstacle with little effort however the second member struggled a bit with returning his SCBA to its properly worn position, again reinforcing the fact that removing the SCBA should be avoided. After making it through the initial obstacle, the first firefighter continued on without realizing that his partner was having difficulties with the SCBA. Members need to discipline themselves to stay together and not assume their partners will all have equal abilities. This also created a division in which either member could have experienced an emergency of their own without the others knowledge, therefore creating an entirely separate firefighter emergency. Tools. As described through your narration the drill was meant to simulate conditions that may be present after a collapse. Not only would members need those tools to assist with their progression through the collapse debris, they may, and possibly more importantly, need them to exit through that same debris. The downed firefighter may not fit through the same opening(s) the rescuers did, requiring an opening to be enlarged. Both members left their tools at the location where they located the downed firefighter. It is difficult but members should find ways that work for them to keep their tools during their retreat. It is good practice to turn PASS alerts off as soon as the downed firefighter is located. This could signal to other members of the RIT or other firefighters that might be searching that the downed firefighter has been located. More importantly it will also allow for greater communication between the team members and the downed firefighter provided he/she is conscious. And it will of course enhance the ability to communicate via portable radio. Again as I stated, just some observations of mine that will hopefully be taken as nothing more than some thoughts to take into consideration.

    • @firstduemachinists5146
      @firstduemachinists5146 Před 3 lety

      I couldn’t agree more with literally everything you said. Very well put. Thank you for passing on your trade!

    • @xaclockard9472
      @xaclockard9472 Před 3 lety

      Valid points, all. Good drill, BTW...

    • @CalebsLifestyle
      @CalebsLifestyle Před 2 lety

      This is right on the spot I agree only thing is if it was me I would leave my tool behind the reasoning for that is someone's life is more important than that tool but only reason I would take ofc in cert scenario's I would or my back up partner have it or have a fresh crew in there with me to assist us on getting that down firefighter out if that resource is available and I'm disagreeing with anything your saying at all. Maybe you could fill me in on some more information.

    • @tafadzwachikweye9461
      @tafadzwachikweye9461 Před rokem

      Was about to make same observation write up..thank you

    • @almerindaromeira8352
      @almerindaromeira8352 Před rokem

      As someone from overseas (Germany) I can't agree more with everything said. Just a small insight into our tactics: we operate in buddy teams, never alone. We have the manpower (standard crew per truck is 6 to 9) and if something happens you already have someone with you at the nozzle. Our packs also have a connector and you can get an air supply without removing any gear whatsoever. We could actually daisy-chain people up if we wanted to. Our PASS devices are built in to the radio and they actually transmit a network wide distress calls for a man down situation. A rescuing team takes a bottle with said connector with them in case the problem is in fact lack of air. The rest is pretty much the same, only we have different turnout gear and as you americans love to mock, full helmets, which are pretty good in all honesty.

  • @reginatoon4153
    @reginatoon4153 Před 3 lety

    Stupid ar bag

  • @JS-zb1vv
    @JS-zb1vv Před 3 lety

    It’s easy to pull that at waist height. Doesn’t seem practical at all to climb on on top of the truck to pull that off . I don’t think it will pull off straight out of the hose trays that easy. Do your hose tray have dips in it like that ? That crazy . Don’t think you can convince anyone pulling this from a training bed instead of the engine. But I like that you are training and having options are great. Or did I miss what it was intended for ?

    • @firstduemachinists5146
      @firstduemachinists5146 Před 3 lety

      That’s right. This definitely works better as a bumper load. 2 of our engines are set up with these in the front bumper.

    • @bradenfoy2766
      @bradenfoy2766 Před 3 lety

      This is for a front bumper line setup not a cross lay

    • @lilreb601
      @lilreb601 Před 3 lety

      @@firstduemachinists5146 That isn’t a “horseshoe load.”

    • @firstduemachinists5146
      @firstduemachinists5146 Před 3 lety

      Thank you for pointing that out, definitely not a horseshoe@@lilreb601. That was a bad attempt to describe a flat load that follows the “U” shape of the hose trough. Good catch and thanks for saying something. I didn’t even think about it.

  • @00ASuperstarGames
    @00ASuperstarGames Před 3 lety

    Takata Airbag Recall Japanese

  • @NessNik
    @NessNik Před 3 lety

    Nice Video Guys, Stay safe

  • @johnnovaktr2fd677
    @johnnovaktr2fd677 Před 3 lety

    Nice training video thank you!!

  • @jugmbh6697
    @jugmbh6697 Před 3 lety

    Its got shrapnel in the passanger side