For some reason I don’t remember seeing this video before, but I’ll answer some of the questions asked here. At the time I was the Chief of the Harwinton Volunteer Fire Department. This was called in by the homeowner as a chimney fire. Myself and one of my Lieutenants, car five, were at a Christmas party about a mile away and were there in minutes. I went inside to see what was going on while car five did a three sixty. He spotted the extension to the wall and roof at which time I contacted dispatch and ramped this up to a structure fire. This is the reason that all our available equipment rolled which is our protocol. I’m dam proud that we have the turnout we do and will never apologize for instances where more equipment responds than is necessary. Blue lights are legal in Ct and red lights on private vehicles are allowed on Chiefs and deputy chiefs vehicles with a permit which they have. Our tanker type is known a quick dump and carries 2,200 gallons. Harwinton has very few hydrant’s and the response area was miles from any water. In Ct sirens are not required unless you are exceeding the posted speed limit or requesting the right of way at an intersection. Our apparatus respond use our sirens when needed but with the responsibility that we are asking for the right of way not demanding it. If we have to stop we do. The old 81 ALF Century soon realized his headlights weren’t on once he got out from under the streetlight. All our current rigs are set so once the ignition is on the headlights are on. The old 81 wasn’t set up that way. Yes the Sentry siren blows every noon for 30 seconds. In over 50 years that I’ve been a member I can only recall one complaint about the siren and the old chief at the time was said to respond by saying. “We’ll since your awake you might as well come over an help out”.
Call ended up being a chimney fire extended into the siding and roof area of modern 1980's open floor plan home. Big party in progress at the time on a Saturday night a of couple weeks before Christmas. Last time for E3 being 1st out (4 structures) after 20yrs. You can see its replacement new E2 in the middle bay facing out the back, not yet in service. Last pumper out, old E2 (30yrs old, 692TTA Detroit's do sound nice don't they!) was given to Bono, Dominican Republic, recently arrived there.
Ok yea, the tanker could have used a siren but as for the car, (s)he was driving towards a firehouse at night as the tanker was pulling out of the station with the emergency lights on. The driver saw the tanker roll towards the road, so he should have slowed or stopped. And I'm sure the driver of the old ALF engine soon enough realized he was forgetting something.
The old ALF that rolled out at 3:50 didn't need to use a siren. didn't you guys here that beautiful sound of an old Detroit Diesel when they rolled out? Oh yeah baby!!!
Considering they had to drive there, they responded way faster than some other stations ive seen on videos that took them 2 and a half minutes or more to respond to a call.
Ahole has the nerve to honk at a fire truck responding. I think they ought to put stop lights outside the department and let the Aholes stir as people respond. IMHO.
NVTrucker I agree, however, I live near Harwinton and I can tell you it's a small town - I think the only traffic light in town is at the intersection of Routes 4 and 118. You're right; the jack@$$ has some growing up to do.
@@doverpoint1 As a New Yorker I would say 'stick it in your ass', however you're probably right. Idiots dont yield and still don't grasp the 'move over' law.
My father and my Grandparents grew up in Litchfield Borough many decades ago . Have fond memories of going there all the time to their house . That's when the town would activate the sirens at night for the FD there . Quite the spectacle at say 1:00 am !
Last time I Checked A Chimney Was Attached To the house. So that to me would be a full structure response. . That's how we roll down in Nc... Good Job Brothers.
Different Cities ,Counties..Anything On A House (Carport Chimney ) Is Toned Out As A Structure Fire Or Possible Structure Fire... Don't Know How Y'all Get Dispatched But We All Have Different Responses
+Calvin Robinson Well in a village in Upstate NY we would roll all trucks to a chimney fire. Half of our district had hydrants. Better to be cautious. If a full response was not necessary you just radio back to the station to hold back a truck or two. In the middle of the day you may only get enough of a response to roll one or two trucks. First two trucks carried a total of 2400 gallons of water so if you were out of the water district you had enough water for a while and if you knew you needed more, mutual aid was a radio call away. This was a good response.
I was on 2 departments in RI. One volunteer the other full time. A chimney fire with the paid department got a full building box response. 3 engines, battalion chief, a ladder and a rescue. This was a small department. 5 engines. 2 ladders. 2 rescues and 1 chief per shift running out of 4 stations. The volunteer department went with 2 engines, 2 tankers and a rescue. If we had a ladder that would have gone too.
I've never seen a fire tanker before. I don't know the name of something like that, but I'm guessing that's for places where fire hydrants aren't in high supply.
a little bit slower than im used to but like alot of depts in my area this looks like its very rural and not alot of members live near the station if so this is an awesome response! good video showing how most small town volunteer depts roll lol
Its interesting how the volunteer's all assemble. Really awesome to watch. I also thought it was fascinating that most of their personal vehicles had emergency lights too. How far do they have to travel to get to the station?
Wow. Are some of you that all knowing and supierior firemen that you rip your brothers apart over what you see in a 7 minute video? smdh I give them all the credit, dumping house and not being complacent. Great PR, shows they care, rolling that many rigs. They'd get a yes vote on a bond levy or a check during donation drives. Also says a lot about their pride and dedication. Don't judge because you are not the perfect firefighter on the perfect fire department. Hell, I'm envious. Kudos!
The siren is a sentry 7v8 I knew the siren was a sentry but I didn’t know the type so I looked up the different sounds of some sentry sand found one that sounds exactly like the one in the video
The YTFD, I love it! Why would anyone bring just one engine for a reported chimney fire?, last I checked chimneys are attached the structure which makes it ..........a structure fire until proven otherwise. So responding the everything you can is probably a better choice than getting on scene and finding the fire has extended into the walls, attic, or more and having to play catch up, especially in a volunteer FD when you never know what the turn out will be. Mutual aid maybe a long way off in some municipalities.
LOVE those old trucks. My volunteer department had tonss of trucks from the 80's and 90's. Worked better than the neighboring FD's and got sent to maintenance less.
Connecticut is a blue light state only for volunteer firefighters and green for emt/paramedics. So no only chiefs have red lights/siren allowed. Hope that helped and have a good night!
I was just surprised at a full response for a chimney fire although you never know what you get into until you are on scene. But yea the one truck coming out with no lights and at night, I would have been yelling at the driver to turn the lights on the car probably did not see it
With what technology that is out there today for unpaid professionals to use to alert the members of an alarm . The ole air raid alarm type alerting system is outdated. No one uses them much anymore . So why still have it in use ?
Yo. I have watched this response over & over many times. I remember being so excited when a Harwinton response finally came to youtube. But I NEVER really knew who's channel this was until now. I put 2 & 2 together & I'm like "oh..."
You don't have to use the siren. Only if you need to clear traffic. If you use it all the way there all you will do is annoy everyone between the department and the scene.
Just out of Curiosity, are your trucks equipped with Sirens? Might be a good idea to turn them on when exiting the firehouse, Tanker almost caused an accident with a vehicle. Just sayin...
It's a 45 but everyone goes 60-80 known speeding area there is a pull over spot where the state cops sits waiting for speeders if he doesn't get you he'll make sure your caught before you get too far always three cops in 6 miles or less
In Kentucky, if you are driving with emergency lights on, law requires you to have the siren activated as well. Even if its the middle of the night. Now not everyone does that most will still use the sirens.
Ok I just had to go read some of the prior comments and it forced me to post again. Some people are really out of touch with the fire service and good sound operating guidelines. First, these guys probably know they could be faced with water supply issues, that's the reason they own a tanker/tender in the first place. Second, lets say each of the engines carries 500 gallons, and the tender another 1500 or so, it does look rather small for tender standards, Theoretically that should have them arriving with a minimum of 3,000 gallons for what should be considered a structure fire. Not bad for a volunteer FD. Second, you do not need to have your sirens on just because you have your lights on, and lets not start the liability debate over that one. That's just the wacker syndrome showing through from some of you. The chief you here on the radio would make vehicle number 7 if we really need to get hung up on that one. Blue lights are common in many, many states for FD's and EMS alike. If I have one complaint about this, it would be that some of the members didn't gear up prior to boarding the rigs.
Here in Pa, if your lights are on, your siren will be on. Visual and audible for emergency vehicles in my area. If you get smacked by a passing vehicle, chances are it's your fault.
Ha love the car honking. That's how you end up with a liability claim right there.... not even counting that fact that the siren wasn't running and the driver of the car would be stupid not to call it out. It's one thing rolling down an empty road with the siren off... The truck is half sticking out of the station (could it be returning or leaving or guys f-ing around? Driver doesn't know really, only that it's 30 feet back from the road.) Guy floors it at 3:10/3:11 to almost crossing into traffic at 3:13 (get's honked at by the car at 3:14) that's not enough time for passing traffic to slow or stop. Just because you have lights and a siren doesn't mean others can stop on a dime and/or have the reaction time of a race car driver... I see this a lot and it's ridiculous. Getting a truck t-boned with a 40/50mph hit would be tough to explain away if the driver of the car wasn't already egregiously doing something else stupid like blowing twice the legal limit or blowing a traffic light altogether.
HOW OFTEN DO CHIMNEY FIRES ACTUALLY HAPPEN? I NEVER BEEN ABLE THE CHIMNEY CAN BE CAUGHT ON FIRE; IT'S USUALLY THE HOUSE NOT THE CHIMNEY FOR STRANGE REASONS.😢
My guess would be a volunteer firefighter. A lot of states and/or counties allow volunteers to use private vehicles with lights to respond to the station.
Cleveland, MS does...both the city and the county firemen use lights and sirens....and when they still used the overheads, it was city policy all vehicles pull to the right of the street and stop until the siren stopped sounding...let the firemen through....and it worked....all volunteer...class 4 insurance rated...
Alex W Ah, okay. Thanks. In German all additional lights are absolutely prohibited if you are not a city's fire chief (he also needs a special permission). But every single volunteer firefighter is allowed to break traffic rules while responding to a call on the way to their fire station (if necessary and nobody is put in danger by doing so). As far as I know most US VFs are not even allowed to drive faster than usual. Is that right?
DeBukkIt correct here in Massachusetts we can't speed. Also our red lights are only courtesy meaning other traffic doesn't have to pull over for us.... however most do. Where I'm located everyone pulls over. And we go thru the red lights only when everyone has stopped and allowed us to go thru.
Thats a lot of equipment for a Chimney Fire! Response needs to be appropriate for the call. We respond 1 Engine, and if its to an area with no hydrants, then we add the tanker to the response.
+Travis Hanson Harwinton actually runs a large volume of calls. Mostly motor vehicle accidents, as they are number 1 on the list for being toned to the areas major highway. Route 8.
Travis Hanson Well I don't know how you construct chimneys in the US but most chimneys are designed to contain fire consequently chimney fires are usually soot fires. In 25 years I have never required more than one pump to deal with one. The only exception I can imagine more than one pump attendance is for a thatched roof (reed covered). The only time I ever had fires outside of the chimney is what we call a 'timber under hearth' fire where due to poor construction timber joists have projected under the hearth and caught fire due to a crack in the hearth stone. At one time a fire in a dirty flue could result in a financial penalty but a defective flue was exempt. That eventually fell by the wayside due to the fear that home owners would refuse to call it in just in case they got a fine. I presume you do full turnouts because most US houses are timber built.
Quite possible. A friend of mine (Mike g. on UA-cam) works for the most of Reading, Pennsylvania’s fire departments, (he’s an assistant chief) has been honked at so many times before Reading added the stop lights, also, chimney fires are common.
Our rescue rig goes to all our calls regardless of nature since it has our saw, jaws, etc. on it. We have 6 trucks as a volunteer dept serving 3500 or more people. We tell our guys to take the Pierce and Rescue rig first (all seats full) and anyone that gets to the station after those 2 rigs leave will take our brush truck (for manpower on scene) and if that truck is full, then the other FF's can take a Rural pumper. Most of the time though only 3 trucks leave the station due to guys being at work or out of town, at which point we would call for mutual aid from our buddies of a town about 5 miles north. Small town complications, but we make it work lol
+Blake Pamperin yeah the town I live in is Goreville Illinois and our fire department is also voulnteer and we have one engine one tanker one brush and two rescue units and our county ambulance service is the only transportation ambulances we got and they have four for the whole county and our rescue covers our town and all the county side Inbetween one is like a 1980 ford rescue box ambulance looking one and one is I think a 1990 pickup with a cover (that we just got about two months ago) and one of them and a local Goreville officer or sheriffs deputy goes as first responders and help whoever needs help until the county ambulance service gets on scene then they help with lift assistance if they end up transporting. Small towns make the best with what they got :)
Ok first I have seen some departments run no sirens at night do to the people in town... And you said 7 units responded I seen 5 the ambulance, the 2 front line trucks the tanker and the 4th door second line truck.
pipesmoker I can understand why they honked, that tanker pulled out onto the road without even checking. It probably scared the shit out of the person in that car. I think these guys need to do some more EVOC training.
+James Gorden The tanker had his red lights on and sitting on the apron for a bit. If the car is approaching the firehouse and sees a emergency vehicle with its red lights on he should slow down. That being said yes the driver of the tanker should also use caution when pulling into traffic. I have seen to many times with civilians that they DO NOT respect an emergency vehicle and that was the intent of my previous comment.
pipesmoker I agree with you, people don't respect emergency vehicles and that is why operators have to be extremely vigilant. If you get in an accident then more than likely you're going to court and you very well may lose. These guys had their lights on by no sirens, and that tanker driver didn't slow down or stop and check the road before pulling out onto it. On my department that's a big deal, if any of us are caught driving like that then we lose that privilege.
The first ALF (E3) that pulled out was doing it's last run as first due. It was replaced by the pumper in the far end of the middle bay, you can see the back of it when the middle truck pulls out. It was 20 years old at the time of this call. It is equipped for brush fires and water supply duty now and for the last 7 years. It's replacement is being specked at this time. The last pumper out, also a ALF, E2 (with the infamous late appearing headlights) was given to the town of Bono, in the Dominican Republic and is still in service there. On a personnel note I find amusing the number of comments disparaging this department responding 3 pumpers and a tanker to a chimney fire. The severity of chimney fires runs the spectrum from, "no big deal, all we need is a Indian can and a few shots of water," to, "Oh sh*t! it's in the wall and spreading to the roof." I've seen many examples of each. During the "Energy Crisis" in the early 1970's this department responded to over 150 such calls and at the time they were categorized separately from structure fires. This lead people in the fire service to believe Chimney fires need not be taken seriously. They were almost regarded as service calls. Over the ensuing few years it was found to be prudent to bring enough at the start in order to have what you need on scene or on the road if need be. Anyone that has been doing this very long knows, the fire dictates what it's going to take to put it out. I frequently recall the words of an Assistant Chief from Hartford that we had as an instructor for many years, I paraphrase: "We didn't start the fire. Every fire goes out, even the ones we don't go to. We're here to see to it they go out after causing the least amount of damage possible. I'm not here to tell you guys how to run your fire department. You've been doing that longer than anyone and know what works for you."
Ok I rewatched it and the car that honked its horn, yea the tanker did have its lights on so the car would have seen it and should have slowed or stopped, but yea the 4th truck with no lights on that was not smart
yea i guess a large tanker with flashing lights pulling out of a fire station wasnt enough ,,,, anything else you can find wrong? how bout u upload some vids of your dept? so everyone can see how you excel in response
Do you know how fast a chimney fire could become a structure fire? Better to show up with more manpower and be prepared for potentially a fully involved house that started out as chimney fire.
im sure they would since it is a structure. How far away are chimney usually from the house? Have you discovered some type of detached chimney style construction that planet earth isn't aware of yet except you ? ?
For some reason I don’t remember seeing this video before, but I’ll answer some of the questions asked here. At the time I was the Chief of the Harwinton Volunteer Fire Department. This was called in by the homeowner as a chimney fire. Myself and one of my Lieutenants, car five, were at a Christmas party about a mile away and were there in minutes. I went inside to see what was going on while car five did a three sixty. He spotted the extension to the wall and roof at which time I contacted dispatch and ramped this up to a structure fire. This is the reason that all our available equipment rolled which is our protocol. I’m dam proud that we have the turnout we do and will never apologize for instances where more equipment responds than is necessary. Blue lights are legal in Ct and red lights on private vehicles are allowed on Chiefs and deputy chiefs vehicles with a permit which they have. Our tanker type is known a quick dump and carries 2,200 gallons. Harwinton has very few hydrant’s and the response area was miles from any water. In Ct sirens are not required unless you are exceeding the posted speed limit or requesting the right of way at an intersection. Our apparatus respond use our sirens when needed but with the responsibility that we are asking for the right of way not demanding it. If we have to stop we do. The old 81 ALF Century soon realized his headlights weren’t on once he got out from under the streetlight. All our current rigs are set so once the ignition is on the headlights are on. The old 81 wasn’t set up that way. Yes the Sentry siren blows every noon for 30 seconds. In over 50 years that I’ve been a member I can only recall one complaint about the siren and the old chief at the time was said to respond by saying. “We’ll since your awake you might as well come over an help out”.
I don't live anywhere close to your 1st Due, but thanks all the same to you and the other members of your department for your service, Chief.
You tell ‘em uncle John, appreciate your service for all the years
Call ended up being a chimney fire extended into the siding and roof area of modern 1980's open floor plan home. Big party in progress at the time on a Saturday night a of couple weeks before Christmas. Last time for E3 being 1st out (4 structures) after 20yrs. You can see its replacement new E2 in the middle bay facing out the back, not yet in service. Last pumper out, old E2 (30yrs old, 692TTA Detroit's do sound nice don't they!) was given to Bono, Dominican Republic, recently arrived there.
One of THE best VOL videos I've seen on youtube. Awesome response and I love the ALF with the single rotator!
Ok yea, the tanker could have used a siren but as for the car, (s)he was driving towards a firehouse at night as the tanker was pulling out of the station with the emergency lights on. The driver saw the tanker roll towards the road, so he should have slowed or stopped. And I'm sure the driver of the old ALF engine soon enough realized he was forgetting something.
The old ALF that rolled out at 3:50 didn't need to use a siren. didn't you guys here that beautiful sound of an old Detroit Diesel when they rolled out? Oh yeah baby!!!
bigum7509 she's a beast. Trust me on that
bigum7509 don’t you miss the sound of a Detroit diesel I sure do miss that rumble
Might need some headlights though!
Considering they had to drive there, they responded way faster than some other stations ive seen on videos that took them 2 and a half minutes or more to respond to a call.
Yeah. Thought so as well. That was quick!
The American LaFrance Century Series shown here 3:46 was retired and sold to another department and was replaced by a sutphen pumper.
Ahole has the nerve to honk at a fire truck responding. I think they ought to put stop lights outside the department and let the Aholes stir as people respond. IMHO.
NVTrucker I agree, however, I live near Harwinton and I can tell you it's a small town - I think the only traffic light in town is at the intersection of Routes 4 and 118. You're right; the jack@$$ has some growing up to do.
The guy must be from New York
@@doverpoint1 As a New Yorker I would say 'stick it in your ass', however you're probably right. Idiots dont yield and still don't grasp the 'move over' law.
Won't stop assholes like that
Pit maneuver the asshole maybe that will teach them
My father and my Grandparents grew up in Litchfield Borough many decades ago . Have fond memories of going there all the time to their house . That's when the town would activate the sirens at night for the FD there . Quite the spectacle at say 1:00 am !
Last time I Checked A Chimney Was Attached To the house. So that to me would be a full structure response. . That's how we roll down in Nc... Good Job Brothers.
That's right Calvin Robinson... Better to have it and not need it than to need it and not have it. That's how we NC boys do it
Damn straight
Different Cities ,Counties..Anything On A House (Carport Chimney ) Is Toned Out As A Structure Fire Or Possible Structure Fire... Don't Know How Y'all Get Dispatched But We All Have Different Responses
+Calvin Robinson Well in a village in Upstate NY we would roll all trucks to a chimney fire. Half of our district had hydrants. Better to be cautious. If a full response was not necessary you just radio back to the station to hold back a truck or two. In the middle of the day you may only get enough of a response to roll one or two trucks. First two trucks carried a total of 2400 gallons of water so if you were out of the water district you had enough water for a while and if you knew you needed more, mutual aid was a radio call away. This was a good response.
I was on 2 departments in RI. One volunteer the other full time. A chimney fire with the paid department got a full building box response. 3 engines, battalion chief, a ladder and a rescue. This was a small department. 5 engines. 2 ladders. 2 rescues and 1 chief per shift running out of 4 stations.
The volunteer department went with 2 engines, 2 tankers and a rescue. If we had a ladder that would have gone too.
This dept has a really cool mix of apparatus.
My father in law lives right next door, aside from calls the siren blast every day at noon, you get used to it
and the big siren is to call all the volunteer fire people to the station for the call
Great response. I rather empty the station then not have enough manpower and equipment.
Man I love seeing those old fire trucks
Litchfield County, Northwest Ct. Siren gos every noon.
The tanker is 2500 gal.
I've never seen a fire tanker before. I don't know the name of something like that, but I'm guessing that's for places where fire hydrants aren't in high supply.
Redman147 Tanker. My department covers an area with no hydrants
Thank you I was driving by and my siren went off so i stopped' and that's one of my favorite trucks there too.
Great Great Catch!! I love watching Vol's responding, Keep more coming!
a little bit slower than im used to but like alot of depts in my area this looks like its very rural and not alot of members live near the station if so this is an awesome response! good video showing how most small town volunteer depts roll lol
Its interesting how the volunteer's all assemble. Really awesome to watch. I also thought it was fascinating that most of their personal vehicles had emergency lights too. How far do they have to travel to get to the station?
it depends on the type of call that comes in
Wow. Are some of you that all knowing and supierior firemen that you rip your brothers apart over what you see in a 7 minute video? smdh I give them all the credit, dumping house and not being complacent. Great PR, shows they care, rolling that many rigs. They'd get a yes vote on a bond levy or a check during donation drives. Also says a lot about their pride and dedication. Don't judge because you are not the perfect firefighter on the perfect fire department. Hell, I'm envious. Kudos!
(S.D.R. IS WRITING)
(0:16) IS THAT AN UNMARKED POLICE TRUCK PULLING INTO THE FIRE STATION?
The siren is a sentry 7v8 I knew the siren was a sentry but I didn’t know the type so I looked up the different sounds of some sentry sand found one that sounds exactly like the one in the video
It’s is a Sentry Siren but is actually a single phase 3V8 (I’ve seen it many times).
The YTFD, I love it! Why would anyone bring just one engine for a reported chimney fire?, last I checked chimneys are attached the structure which makes it ..........a structure fire until proven otherwise. So responding the everything you can is probably a better choice than getting on scene and finding the fire has extended into the walls, attic, or more and having to play catch up, especially in a volunteer FD when you never know what the turn out will be. Mutual aid maybe a long way off in some municipalities.
first-due has to upgrade the scene to a working structure fire
@Steve Franklin. dont think povs with blue lights are allowed to run with sirens
Glad to see the Chiefs of the YTFD (UA-cam Fire Department) have spoken. You guys make me laugh....
Awesome siren! Quite loud though, how many volunteer firefighters showed up? This was a great video, liked and faved!
LOVE those old trucks. My volunteer department had tonss of trucks from the 80's and 90's. Worked better than the neighboring FD's and got sent to maintenance less.
Why didn't the trucks have the sirens. Was it because of how late it was? We're the streets not busy enough?
Connecticut is a blue light state only for volunteer firefighters and green for emt/paramedics. So no only chiefs have red lights/siren allowed. Hope that helped and have a good night!
My Department has 3 engines, 1 squad, 1 brush/grass, and 1 ladder and we are a volunteer Department
I was just surprised at a full response for a chimney fire although you never know what you get into until you are on scene. But yea the one truck coming out with no lights and at night, I would have been yelling at the driver to turn the lights on the car probably did not see it
Is it just me, or did that last far right truck leave without it's headlights on? :) Great video!
Yes, made sure the emergency lights were on , but neglected to turn on the headlights on an extremely dark night. Tunnel vision at its finest 💁♂️
With what technology that is out there today for unpaid professionals to use to alert the members of an alarm . The ole air raid alarm type alerting system is outdated. No one uses them much anymore . So why still have it in use ?
Yo. I have watched this response over & over many times. I remember being so excited when a Harwinton response finally came to youtube. But I NEVER really knew who's channel this was until now. I put 2 & 2 together & I'm like "oh..."
surely a paper system for fire fighters here would be more efficient?
why did the last engine not turn on the headlights???!?
i like that american that responded first
What siren is that again?
do they know how to use the siren on the trucks or r they for decoration
Well,if the town is that small then I guess that loud siren at the beginning woke the whole town up anyway so why not run the siren?
mining city comm Ray Small towns use the siren sparingly, but hell, third out could at least turn on the headlights.
You don't have to use the siren. Only if you need to clear traffic. If you use it all the way there all you will do is annoy everyone between the department and the scene.
Oooh I would love a siren like the one in the beginning..... 2 scare the shit out of my neighbours 😁😁😁😂😂
I Did Check, It's A Sentry 3V8 Siren As Its Starts Up.
I think that horn was from the tanker.
Just out of Curiosity, are your trucks equipped with Sirens? Might be a good idea to turn them on when exiting the firehouse, Tanker almost caused an accident with a vehicle. Just sayin...
What kind of siren does that ambulance have?
And only one that didn't turn lights on was the last truck responding
at least the ambulance had the sense to use sirens
It's a 45 but everyone goes 60-80 known speeding area there is a pull over spot where the state cops sits waiting for speeders if he doesn't get you he'll make sure your caught before you get too far always three cops in 6 miles or less
In Kentucky, if you are driving with emergency lights on, law requires you to have the siren activated as well. Even if its the middle of the night. Now not everyone does that most will still use the sirens.
Connor Brumleve that’s just daft!
Why have a siren that probably annoys people if you have pagers now?
Ok I just had to go read some of the prior comments and it forced me to post again. Some people are really out of touch with the fire service and good sound operating guidelines. First, these guys probably know they could be faced with water supply issues, that's the reason they own a tanker/tender in the first place. Second, lets say each of the engines carries 500 gallons, and the tender another 1500 or so, it does look rather small for tender standards, Theoretically that should have them arriving with a minimum of 3,000 gallons for what should be considered a structure fire. Not bad for a volunteer FD. Second, you do not need to have your sirens on just because you have your lights on, and lets not start the liability debate over that one. That's just the wacker syndrome showing through from some of you. The chief you here on the radio would make vehicle number 7 if we really need to get hung up on that one. Blue lights are common in many, many states for FD's and EMS alike.
If I have one complaint about this, it would be that some of the members didn't gear up prior to boarding the rigs.
Here in Pa, if your lights are on, your siren will be on. Visual and audible for emergency vehicles in my area. If you get smacked by a passing vehicle, chances are it's your fault.
@@adamkeyser3737 I run in PA and that is not a rule. That may be your depts rule.
I love sentry sirens when they are screaming
I agree totally. Kudos to these guys
Ha love the car honking. That's how you end up with a liability claim right there.... not even counting that fact that the siren wasn't running and the driver of the car would be stupid not to call it out. It's one thing rolling down an empty road with the siren off...
The truck is half sticking out of the station (could it be returning or leaving or guys f-ing around? Driver doesn't know really, only that it's 30 feet back from the road.) Guy floors it at 3:10/3:11 to almost crossing into traffic at 3:13 (get's honked at by the car at 3:14) that's not enough time for passing traffic to slow or stop. Just because you have lights and a siren doesn't mean others can stop on a dime and/or have the reaction time of a race car driver...
I see this a lot and it's ridiculous. Getting a truck t-boned with a 40/50mph hit would be tough to explain away if the driver of the car wasn't already egregiously doing something else stupid like blowing twice the legal limit or blowing a traffic light altogether.
Does not matter. Emergency lights were on so the car should of taken caution.
Mathew James Nardella Exactly, RED LIGHTS MEAN SLOW DOWN, REGARDLESS
HOW OFTEN DO CHIMNEY FIRES ACTUALLY HAPPEN? I NEVER BEEN ABLE THE CHIMNEY CAN BE CAUGHT ON FIRE; IT'S USUALLY THE HOUSE NOT THE CHIMNEY FOR STRANGE REASONS.😢
Do you know if they sound the siren for a daily test?
That old American Lafrance looked great!
Who's the guy using red flashing lights on his(?) car? Is he a chief/commander and is it his private car or a command vehicle of the department?
My guess would be a volunteer firefighter. A lot of states and/or counties allow volunteers to use private vehicles with lights to respond to the station.
Cleveland, MS does...both the city and the county firemen use lights and sirens....and when they still used the overheads, it was city policy all vehicles pull to the right of the street and stop until the siren stopped sounding...let the firemen through....and it worked....all volunteer...class 4 insurance rated...
he could have been a chief officer in CT like NY the firefighters use blue.... im located in MA we use red/white here'
Alex W Ah, okay. Thanks. In German all additional lights are absolutely prohibited if you are not a city's fire chief (he also needs a special permission). But every single volunteer firefighter is allowed to break traffic rules while responding to a call on the way to their fire station (if necessary and nobody is put in danger by doing so). As far as I know most US VFs are not even allowed to drive faster than usual. Is that right?
DeBukkIt correct here in Massachusetts we can't speed. Also our red lights are only courtesy meaning other traffic doesn't have to pull over for us.... however most do. Where I'm located everyone pulls over. And we go thru the red lights only when everyone has stopped and allowed us to go thru.
Thats a lot of equipment for a Chimney Fire! Response needs to be appropriate for the call. We respond 1 Engine, and if its to an area with no hydrants, then we add the tanker to the response.
Now that's how you dump a house.
Cool trucks but do they have a ladder truck
Try putting the headlights on before leaving the firehouse.
My Fire Departments trucks are built once the master switch is turned on the headlights automatically turn on
Awesome video man, Keep it up
They are on wells my friend.
How can you tell when a department doesn't run many calls. When they empty the station for a chimney fire.
it could have caught the whole house on fire
+Travis Hanson Harwinton actually runs a large volume of calls. Mostly motor vehicle accidents, as they are number 1 on the list for being toned to the areas major highway. Route 8.
Travis Hanson Well I don't know how you construct chimneys in the US but most chimneys are designed to contain fire consequently chimney fires are usually soot fires. In 25 years I have never required more than one pump to deal with one. The only exception I can imagine more than one pump attendance is for a thatched roof (reed covered). The only time I ever had fires outside of the chimney is what we call a 'timber under hearth' fire where due to poor construction timber joists have projected under the hearth and caught fire due to a crack in the hearth stone. At one time a fire in a dirty flue could result in a financial penalty but a defective flue was exempt. That eventually fell by the wayside due to the fear that home owners would refuse to call it in just in case they got a fine. I presume you do full turnouts because most US houses are timber built.
Quite possible. A friend of mine (Mike g. on UA-cam) works for the most of Reading, Pennsylvania’s fire departments, (he’s an assistant chief) has been honked at so many times before Reading added the stop lights, also, chimney fires are common.
Another fucking armchair quarter back
Was the rescue rig just going cause of smoke ventilation or something like a standby in cause somethin went wrong?
Our rescue rig goes to all our calls regardless of nature since it has our saw, jaws, etc. on it. We have 6 trucks as a volunteer dept serving 3500 or more people. We tell our guys to take the Pierce and Rescue rig first (all seats full) and anyone that gets to the station after those 2 rigs leave will take our brush truck (for manpower on scene) and if that truck is full, then the other FF's can take a Rural pumper. Most of the time though only 3 trucks leave the station due to guys being at work or out of town, at which point we would call for mutual aid from our buddies of a town about 5 miles north. Small town complications, but we make it work lol
+Blake Pamperin yeah the town I live in is Goreville Illinois and our fire department is also voulnteer and we have one engine one tanker one brush and two rescue units and our county ambulance service is the only transportation ambulances we got and they have four for the whole county and our rescue covers our town and all the county side Inbetween one is like a 1980 ford rescue box ambulance looking one and one is I think a 1990 pickup with a cover (that we just got about two months ago) and one of them and a local Goreville officer or sheriffs deputy goes as first responders and help whoever needs help until the county ambulance service gets on scene then they help with lift assistance if they end up transporting. Small towns make the best with what they got :)
Ok first I have seen some departments run no sirens at night do to the people in town... And you said 7 units responded I seen 5 the ambulance, the 2 front line trucks the tanker and the 4th door second line truck.
Headlights Day and Night. Someone was too excited on the ALF.
They really should've used their sirens, and that last truck never turned its headlights on.
+James Gorden so I am not the only one who noticed that. and the jerk blowing the horn at the tanker. I hate that.
pipesmoker I can understand why they honked, that tanker pulled out onto the road without even checking. It probably scared the shit out of the person in that car. I think these guys need to do some more EVOC training.
+James Gorden The tanker had his red lights on and sitting on the apron for a bit. If the car is approaching the firehouse and sees a emergency vehicle with its red lights on he should slow down. That being said yes the driver of the tanker should also use caution when pulling into traffic. I have seen to many times with civilians that they DO NOT respect an emergency vehicle and that was the intent of my previous comment.
pipesmoker I agree with you, people don't respect emergency vehicles and that is why operators have to be extremely vigilant. If you get in an accident then more than likely you're going to court and you very well may lose. These guys had their lights on by no sirens, and that tanker driver didn't slow down or stop and check the road before pulling out onto it. On my department that's a big deal, if any of us are caught driving like that then we lose that privilege.
that guy had the balls to beeb at the responding tender
Is the American La France still in service yet?
The first ALF (E3) that pulled out was doing it's last run as first due. It was replaced by the pumper in the far end of the middle bay, you can see the back of it when the middle truck pulls out. It was 20 years old at the time of this call. It is equipped for brush fires and water supply duty now and for the last 7 years. It's replacement is being specked at this time.
The last pumper out, also a ALF, E2 (with the infamous late appearing headlights) was given to the town of Bono, in the Dominican Republic and is still in service there.
On a personnel note I find amusing the number of comments disparaging this department responding 3 pumpers and a tanker to a chimney fire. The severity of chimney fires runs the spectrum from, "no big deal, all we need is a Indian can and a few shots of water," to, "Oh sh*t! it's in the wall and spreading to the roof." I've seen many examples of each. During the "Energy Crisis" in the early 1970's this department responded to over 150 such calls and at the time they were categorized separately from structure fires. This lead people in the fire service to believe Chimney fires need not be taken seriously. They were almost regarded as service calls. Over the ensuing few years it was found to be prudent to bring enough at the start in order to have what you need on scene or on the road if need be.
Anyone that has been doing this very long knows, the fire dictates what it's going to take to put it out. I frequently recall the words of an Assistant Chief from Hartford that we had as an instructor for many years, I paraphrase:
"We didn't start the fire. Every fire goes out, even the ones we don't go to. We're here to see to it they go out after causing the least amount of damage possible. I'm not here to tell you guys how to run your fire department. You've been doing that longer than anyone and know what works for you."
6 actually. 3 engines, 1 tanker, ems, brush.
That sentry sounds very healthy!
Trains and Sirens shut down cycle
Can’t kill a Sentry!
10v?
In Germany, we are not allowed to have emergency lights on private cars :(
Does the siren go off everyday at noon?
Lily Dane I am sure it does blast every day afternoon, but it usually blasts off every morning and at night
Lily Dane I'd have to admit that noise can be as loud as 100DB's
This type of siren can get up to 110, which isn't even that loud!
Some are loud some aren't . At the penn wynne fire company, most sirens blast at a very high frequency
fire depart
Darren?
The siren is made by Sentry because I can tell by it's noise.
I'm certain that it's a Sentry 3v8.
very impressive turnout for that call
looks like the call required a full house response
Ok I rewatched it and the car that honked its horn, yea the tanker did have its lights on so the car would have seen it and should have slowed or stopped, but yea the 4th truck with no lights on that was not smart
The siren is def made my Sentry.
CT run blue lights for fire POV too cool!
Hey do you work at the fire station
yea i guess a large tanker with flashing lights pulling out of a fire station wasnt enough ,,,, anything else you can find wrong? how bout u upload some vids of your dept? so everyone can see how you excel in response
Nice American Lafrance there I ilke Harwington FD alot
Nice video!
yes the ambulance did lol i don't know how many a lot. thank you :)
No POV sirens?
didn't know conneticut used blue lights on povs
do u folks treat chimney fires as a strucher fire
Do you know how fast a chimney fire could become a structure fire? Better to show up with more manpower and be prepared for potentially a fully involved house that started out as chimney fire.
im sure they would since it is a structure. How far away are chimney usually from the house? Have you discovered some type of detached chimney style construction that planet earth isn't aware of yet except you ? ?
Impressive turnout!
No they do not, just ambulance, pumpers, a tanker, and brush truck.
Geared up very quickly
3:15....instant air horn.
Why do you say that?
Sentry?
Yup, a single phase 3V8 and a good looking one too. Been past this station several times. One of these days I'll head out there for a noon test.
i hate chiney fires espesiaclly in oregon. what county is harwinton
Nate Pollen pretty sure Harwinton is in Litchfield County {?} Might be Hartford County
nice way to page everybody. Love it!!!!!!
lmao a bay door open and they are trying to get in single door
You never know. Yeah it's dumb to empty the station, but they could be the only department within so far or there arent that many hydrants.
Awesome!!!!! I want more! :)
No sirens Water truck almost hit a car one truck no headlights. Glad they are not putting out my fire.