I’m not a heavy guy. That shit knocked me straight on my ass and it was a mixture of luck and pure panic I shut the nozzle off before it got away from me lol
I joined my town Volunteer Fire Department a few months ago, and I have gotten to use a 2½ but never had to handle it fully but she is a beast that's for sure. Where we are there aren't any big structures that would need that big of a line so our training is focused on 1½ cause it suits all our needs. We mainly only deal with brush fires and the occasional vehicle fire, structure fires are very rare around here.
My issue with the beginning of this vid is letting the hose go and whipping it around. On our fireground ops, a hose at 210gpm and 107psi will get out of control if let go and whipped like that, however with departments us it less water and pressure it would work. The foot lock for advancing hose is a great tool though. Nice instruction.
Very enjoyable...but I have a question. With showing the rolling over (staying low) and the advancement with using your leg....how does this work with your back up person or what do they do? Both are shown with the nozzleman only.
Pretty good vid. I learned some of these same techniques about 13 years ago from a instructor from Las Vegas. I think his name was Paul Shapiro and he taught a class called "Big Water," or something like that.
this is so different than the british way that we learned in my country but it seems more effective especially the one when you backup your partner with the hose where in the british you have to press shoulder and place you side foot at the back of your partners back leg foot
Amazing that there are comments on pressure and GPM's. Try doing your nozzle reaction calculations on your hose.....its not a pressure issue, its a nozzle reaction issue. Especially with solid bore.
+Spin tires and more What I was told years ago is if it gets away from you and you have no way to tell the your pump operator to shut it down, then you jump on the section that is not flying around and crawl up straddling the hose until you wrestle your way to the nozzle to regain control.
Never have your hand at the front underneath the hose, if the nozzle kicks it flies up and hits you in the face. That one of the basics we were always taught from day 1.
Where’s the SCBA? And the gloves? Shit gets much less agile when you wear the full gear and actually find yourself inside a burning house. This is like watching Kung fu theater in the 80’s. Who fights fire without full gear on a wide open parking lot?
mike herrera not necessarily 'like this' there are many other techniques used out there by other fire companies that are comfortable to them. my company taught us to crawl with one foot forward and all your weight on your back leg, and to clamp the hose at your hip with a hand and it doesn't get away from us that way. it's all about what you are comfortable with, and go your company teaches you. every state and every fire department is different.
I taught a variation of this tonight at my volunteer department and to say it was well received would be an understatement.
Everyone gangsta until they handle a bigass 2½ for the firs time 😂
Real shit. Everyone swinging dicks with the 1 3/4", then when hey hit the 2 1/2" it gets real
TRUE
Lol forget the terms riding the pony..cuz you b riding the fire hose 😂😂
I’m not a heavy guy. That shit knocked me straight on my ass and it was a mixture of luck and pure panic I shut the nozzle off before it got away from me lol
We just watched this in drill tonight, and then proceeded to practice it. LOTS of fun :)
Mind blown, wide open!! 📖
Very helpful, and how smooth and fluent the instructor was at performing, he look like he was break dancing! Strong work!
Invaluable hose-training in less than 4 min! Great Work!!
I joined my town Volunteer Fire Department a few months ago, and I have gotten to use a 2½ but never had to handle it fully but she is a beast that's for sure. Where we are there aren't any big structures that would need that big of a line so our training is focused on 1½ cause it suits all our needs. We mainly only deal with brush fires and the occasional vehicle fire, structure fires are very rare around here.
This was a huge help for me. Thanks for making and posting
Love it, great hands on drill. Thanks for posting.
great tips for he backup ff - thnx for posting love seeing other techniques i can practice.
Great techniques, I'll definitely be implementing them from now on.
My issue with the beginning of this vid is letting the hose go and whipping it around. On our fireground ops, a hose at 210gpm and 107psi will get out of control if let go and whipped like that, however with departments us it less water and pressure it would work. The foot lock for advancing hose is a great tool though. Nice instruction.
Very enjoyable...but I have a question. With showing the rolling over (staying low) and the advancement with using your leg....how does this work with your back up person or what do they do? Both are shown with the nozzleman only.
I was watching Manny Pacquiao and Mayweather highlights. Don't know how I got here lol
Pretty good vid. I learned some of these same techniques about 13 years ago from a instructor from Las Vegas. I think his name was Paul Shapiro and he taught a class called "Big Water," or something like that.
What pressure were you operating the line at? Tried this with out 75 psi 200 gpm and it was a struggle.
Gracias por publicar éste video.
Great, love it.
Great tactics!!!
u make it look very easy
Great vid. On the Clamp technique, what parts of the leg exactly are contacting the line? Knee, shin?
Foot and ankle/low shin. Bring it up tight to the rest of your leg so you can drive with hips and core
What did you use to edit this video?
Staying low, I like that. Pretty slick
Is this tactic for interior or defence , maneuvering a interior attack with SCBA and a 2 1/2 line looks different.
FIREFIGHTERS ARE VERY GOOD AT WHAT THEY DO HANDLING THE FIREHOSE THAT TAKES DOME SERIOUS MUSCLES THAT'S VERY HARD WORK
Whats that jacket you're wearing? I'm digging it.
Looks like a wild land or an extrication jacket
طرق رائعة و مبتكره
nice video !
buenas tecnicas seran practicadas en chile!!
this is so different than the british way that we learned in my country but it seems more effective especially the one when you backup your partner with the hose where in the british you have to press shoulder and place you side foot at the back of your partners back leg foot
Amazing that there are comments on pressure and GPM's. Try doing your nozzle reaction calculations on your hose.....its not a pressure issue, its a nozzle reaction issue. Especially with solid bore.
Nozzle reaction directly correlates exponentially to GPM
nice training vid.
How would you do the back to back with scba on. Seems like you'd have to offset it
These look like hittin hard from the yard techniques. Make sure you look for piles of dog crap before you roll around
how do you catch it if it got away from you
+Spin tires and more What I was told years ago is if it gets away from you and you have no way to tell the your pump operator to shut it down, then you jump on the section that is not flying around and crawl up straddling the hose until you wrestle your way to the nozzle to regain control.
เยี่ยมๆๆๆนะจ๊ะ ครู
I would also like to know what kind of jacket that is. 👍🏻
Take his class and find out. Nozzle forward. 👍
الحمد لله
WOW
Firefighte brazilian ... tks...
Good
We firefighters need to supplement our training with Jiu-Jitsu. We can submit the hose to our will every time.
Indian fire safety
You missed your calling. I hear it now.... Jane Fonda dancing to the 80s aerobics.
How to "back to back" when carry SCBA?
I think it's not right the second man always has to be the eyes of the first man back to back is not a good ergonomic position
Never have your hand at the front underneath the hose, if the nozzle kicks it flies up and hits you in the face. That one of the basics we were always taught from day 1.
Where’s the SCBA? And the gloves? Shit gets much less agile when you wear the full gear and actually find yourself inside a burning house. This is like watching Kung fu theater in the 80’s. Who fights fire without full gear on a wide open parking lot?
LMAO rolling around on a line. Someone will laugh you out of the station. Put that shit inside a house and try it. Where you gonna roll?
This guy has become the most over-rated dude out there. Not saying what he teaches has no value. This is simply A method, not THE method.
+njdevfan69 Did you take the class? Aaron may be to abrasive for you but his hose tactics are spot-on.
+Michael Fazio Tactics? He's teaching how to move hose. What tactics are you talking about?
+njdevfan69 That is why I asked if you had his class. I would keep an open mind and attend.
+njdevfan69 We disagree with what a professional is. I still recommend that you take the class, and I wish you a successful career.
+Michael Fazio I agree with you man, he teaches you to work smarter not harder
Who Tf is laying on a hose line in a fire. It’s an 1 3/4. Move the line
Put the damn fire out. Silly crap.
mike herrera not necessarily 'like this' there are many other techniques used out there by other fire companies that are comfortable to them. my company taught us to crawl with one foot forward and all your weight on your back leg, and to clamp the hose at your hip with a hand and it doesn't get away from us that way. it's all about what you are comfortable with, and go your company teaches you. every state and every fire department is different.
It's firefighter safety, not silly crap.
Mike Herrera I'll give you my turnouts, boots, and SCBA and my position for a week. I'd like to see you make it out alive
@@saulgoodmanfromthehittvsho1314 already got em' thanks though!
@@mherrera725 you're a Firefighter? I bet you're "that guy" Lol
NOTHING goes like this inside a house fire. Good luck.