One of the best FF videos. Good coordination within the teams, no extra babble and a rescue on top of it. Well done! As an non-FF I very much appreciate the subtitles that let me know what is going on. I'm going to check out more of your vids. Thanks.
Very proud of you guys! I come from family of first responders and these videos are like little windows into what they go through! You rock with these videos and the captions are great! Thanks for all you do and be safe and walk strong!
You guys are rock solid from great dispatch to a very calm incident command officer that's just makes for better fire crews it can get hairy when your told somebody's in the basement but your command and crews just kept cool heads and did what they do fire suppression and primary searches . and also love the lids not a lot of crews out west use traditional and as the saying goes leather forever stay safe
It takes a super hero with a h💗rt of gold to do this I support our 🔥 firefighters worldwide looking through there eyes is chilling I have a huge respect for what they do in action at the end of the day and all firefighters accounted for they are someone's. Son , Husband, Father, Brother, Friend, Grandfather Please pull aside when you see them rushing to a seen it really pisses me off when I see drivers run a light still in there way not stopping like drivers are supposed to not realizing it takes seconds off someone else's life ps. I just Subscribed 🖐😀💗
1phone1gamer we use something called a TIC, it's a thermal imaging camera that allows us to find victims in the smoke and in the dark from heat signatures
Night vision essentially works by amplifying light...it won’t help if the light is occluded by thick smoke. Thermal/Infrared detectors don’t need any visible light, since any object with temperature greater than absolute zero (-460F/-273C) emits infrared radiation, and because longer wavelengths tend to pass through mediums (like smoke) better than shorter wavelengths (like visible light), you can see through a decent amount of smoke with a quality thermal camera (this is the reason sunsets are red in appearance; at sunset, the light passes through more atmosphere because of the shallow angle, and less of the shorter, bluer, wavelengths make it through while the redder wavelengths have an easier time, so are more prominent).
I can tell the child has some education! The child probably noticed that he couldn’t get out so lay as close to the ground as possible until rescue could assist him
water on the fire fast as u possibly can thats why that man made it & staying low to the floor ppl dont realize the change in heat condition from floorcto ceiling
Nice of that chief to walk in w/o respiratory protection shortly after it was explained that there is still poison being off gassed by the burned materials.
There are mask mounted thermal imaging cameras but they are expensive and they only assist, you can’t fully rely on them. This is why we are trained to use different search patterns with our hands and feet.
Let's see now. You say a fire doubles in size every sixty seconds. So, if we have a 4X4 ft. fire, and it doubles every 60 seconds, in five minutes it would be 2, 816 square feet. In six minutes it would be 5,632 square feet. At seven minutes the fire would have gone from 16 square feet to 11,264 square feet. Hmmmm...
Rick Wall I believe what they are referring to is not the square footage of the fire damage but the volume of flames and all of its products of combustion. It's not the fire that kills people, it's the smoke it produces. Inside an apartment building like that, you can have a fire on one side and within 5 min the smoke and heat will be on the complete other side of the complex trapping people which could potentially have fatal results. So yes, a fire doubles every 60 seconds it's left not checked. If you watch and videos of how wildland fires spread, some of those are spreading so fast that you can't outdrive. It all depends on the conditions presented.
Unfortunately it's not as easy as 'square foot' damage; it's a consideration of changing conditions. We mean to say that, if left unchecked, a fire will most likely double in size of it's combustion every sixty seconds. As in: if it's a wastebasket on fire- a minute later it may be a wastebasket and the edge of a couch and drapes on fire. Another minute might be the whole couch and the bookcase next to it. We don't have UL studies, just personal experiences of averaging a couple working structure fires a month. This video called 'Every Second Counts' is a great example: ua-cam.com/video/piofZLySsNc/v-deo.html Also, 4x4 is 16. x2 is 32. x2 is 64. x2 is 128. x2 is 256. x2 is 512. Not 2,816. And again, we're not talking about square footage.
@@StocktonFireHistory Thank you for all you firefighters do. I owe my life to the brave men of the Spokane Valley Wa fire dept. I love every one of them. All firefighters are angels without wing's!
In Portugal u can help take out fires at 14.U can start learning at 7yrs old Ik I was teaching 11 graders about the trucks at 7 thewhere like wtf FACTS also America sould make ambulances freeee
Stockton firemen are professionals. They are good at what they do. Keep up the good work.
(((((8noh8m>jl>>88
Great work guys, saved a life. It is what we do. Be safe.
One of the best FF videos. Good coordination within the teams, no extra babble and a rescue on top of it. Well done! As an non-FF I very much appreciate the subtitles that let me know what is going on. I'm going to check out more of your vids. Thanks.
Best firefighting videos! Love the explanations and insight the text provides.
Very proud of you guys! I come from family of first responders and these videos are like little windows into what they go through! You rock with these videos and the captions are great! Thanks for all you do and be safe and walk strong!
You guys are rock solid from great dispatch to a very calm incident command officer that's just makes for better fire crews it can get hairy when your told somebody's in the basement but your command and crews just kept cool heads and did what they do fire suppression and primary searches . and also love the lids not a lot of crews out west use traditional and as the saying goes leather forever stay safe
Excellent fire knockdown. And victim rescue. SFD!!
FMFD FIREFIGHTER#782 the first to write about it and I am not a big fan of this message
FMFD FIREFIGHTER#782 dfgffggfgghuhgynihj
@@justindechelbor2361 oo
Really really nice work Brothers! Excellent job all the way +++++ GO GET 'EM !!!!!
It takes a super hero with a h💗rt of gold to do this I support our 🔥 firefighters worldwide looking through there eyes is chilling I have a huge respect for what they do in action at the end of the day and all firefighters accounted for they are someone's. Son , Husband, Father, Brother, Friend, Grandfather Please pull aside when you see them rushing to a seen it really pisses me off when I see drivers run a light still in there way not stopping like drivers are supposed to not realizing it takes seconds off someone else's life
ps. I just Subscribed 🖐😀💗
Considering the construction of the building, it was a good stop by the brothers. I've seen wood sheds built. Good job guys.
nice job guys. must make you feel good to save someone. God Bless you all,
Which mount are you using for the GoPro on a fire helmet?
Nice grab. Everyone stayed calm and didn't bail on their tasks to flock to the victim. Awesome.
Engineers need to invent something like nightvision for you firefighters so see in the smoke.
1phone1gamer we use something called a TIC, it's a thermal imaging camera that allows us to find victims in the smoke and in the dark from heat signatures
UncleSamsFInest although not alot of departments have them sence there so expensive just for acouple pairs
Night vision essentially works by amplifying light...it won’t help if the light is occluded by thick smoke. Thermal/Infrared detectors don’t need any visible light, since any object with temperature greater than absolute zero (-460F/-273C) emits infrared radiation, and because longer wavelengths tend to pass through mediums (like smoke) better than shorter wavelengths (like visible light), you can see through a decent amount of smoke with a quality thermal camera (this is the reason sunsets are red in appearance; at sunset, the light passes through more atmosphere because of the shallow angle, and less of the shorter, bluer, wavelengths make it through while the redder wavelengths have an easier time, so are more prominent).
I want to see helmets in the future, or respirators/ facemasks with TIC built into the screen. Imagine being able to just iron man our fights.
You Stockton folks are bad to the bone. Fine work!
jesus your videos are fantastic.
Excellent. Life savers.
beautiful placement of the hose!
Geez so much smoke I can’t see so well
I can tell the child has some education!
The child probably noticed that he couldn’t get out so lay as close to the ground as possible until rescue could assist him
He even shut the door and closed himself off from the fire once he knew he was too disoriented to make a safe escape. Smart guy, honestly.
Man really a great job I’m not a firefighter yet the only thing I was thinking was can you get him out faster.
water on the fire fast as u possibly can thats why that man made it & staying low to the floor ppl dont realize the change in heat condition from floorcto ceiling
Firefighting HEROES!🙌
Nice of that chief to walk in w/o respiratory protection shortly after it was explained that there is still poison being off gassed by the burned materials.
so much smoke
Have another beer why don’t ya?
Good job
Why didn't dude jump out the window
Probably some junkie.
I know this is old with todays tec telling me when cant give firefighters a way to see better come on
There are mask mounted thermal imaging cameras but they are expensive and they only assist, you can’t fully rely on them. This is why we are trained to use different search patterns with our hands and feet.
Its not, and they do.
Let's see now. You say a fire doubles in size every sixty seconds. So, if we have a 4X4 ft. fire, and it doubles every 60 seconds, in five minutes it would be 2, 816 square feet. In six minutes it would be 5,632 square feet. At seven minutes the fire would have gone from 16 square feet to 11,264 square feet. Hmmmm...
Rick Wall I believe what they are referring to is not the square footage of the fire damage but the volume of flames and all of its products of combustion. It's not the fire that kills people, it's the smoke it produces. Inside an apartment building like that, you can have a fire on one side and within 5 min the smoke and heat will be on the complete other side of the complex trapping people which could potentially have fatal results. So yes, a fire doubles every 60 seconds it's left not checked. If you watch and videos of how wildland fires spread, some of those are spreading so fast that you can't outdrive. It all depends on the conditions presented.
Unfortunately it's not as easy as 'square foot' damage; it's a consideration of changing conditions. We mean to say that, if left unchecked, a fire will most likely double in size of it's combustion every sixty seconds. As in: if it's a wastebasket on fire- a minute later it may be a wastebasket and the edge of a couch and drapes on fire. Another minute might be the whole couch and the bookcase next to it. We don't have UL studies, just personal experiences of averaging a couple working structure fires a month. This video called 'Every Second Counts' is a great example:
ua-cam.com/video/piofZLySsNc/v-deo.html
Also, 4x4 is 16. x2 is 32. x2 is 64. x2 is 128. x2 is 256. x2 is 512. Not 2,816. And again, we're not talking about square footage.
@@StocktonFireHistory Thank you for all you firefighters do. I owe my life to the brave men of the Spokane Valley Wa fire dept. I love every one of them. All firefighters are angels without wing's!
In Portugal u can help take out fires at 14.U can start learning at 7yrs old Ik I was teaching 11 graders about the trucks at 7 thewhere like wtf FACTS also America sould make ambulances freeee