Madrid Police & Ambulance Collection // Policía & Ambulancias Madrid

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  • Опубліковано 14 жов 2024
  • Vehículos de la Policía y de los Servicios de emergencias médicas en urgencia en Madrid.
    Video compilation of Police and EMS vehicles responding in Madrid.
    Videozusammenschnitt mit Polizei- und Rettungsdienstfahrzeugen auf Alarmfahrt in Madrid.
    by Dirk Steinhardt - www.rescue911.de - www.rescue-tube... - Madrid, Spain / España‎ - 11.2015
    Facebook: / rescue911.de
    Twitter: / rescue911de
    Google+: plus.google.co...
    Video clips of responding emergency vehicles - wwwrescue911de
    On this channel you will find video clips of emergency vehicles (fire/rescue, ambulance, police) from around the world responding to calls with their warning lights and sirens.
    Please note that all videos being posted on this channel have been made by myself!
    Videos von Einsatzfahrzeugen auf Alarmfahrt - wwwrescue911de
    Auf diesem Kanal findet ihr Videoclips von Einsatzfahrzeugen (Feuerwehr, Rettungsdienst, Polizei) aus diversen Ländern, die mit Sondersignal unterwegs sind.
    Bitte beachtet, dass alle hier geposteten Videos ausschließlich von mir gemacht wurden!

КОМЕНТАРІ • 41

  • @Lesloi6227
    @Lesloi6227 7 років тому +17

    I just love the paint job on the ambulances - so neat - yellow and red. Nice to be different. Great catch of footage - well done. Thanxs

  • @061zgz
    @061zgz 7 років тому +2

    Awesome compilation.

  • @Zulnex
    @Zulnex 7 років тому +2

    Great video as always. Thank you for sharing.

  • @EmergenciasES
    @EmergenciasES 7 років тому +6

    Very nice video!

  • @siyaoluan1877
    @siyaoluan1877 7 років тому +11

    I like Spanish lighting. With that said, I personally indeed find using ONLY amber lights on emergency vehicles is not a good idea. From a global perspective amber lights in almost all places indicate need for caution but no urgency. No, I don't think "all cultures must be like mine", but the thing is decision making, especially that pertinent to safety, shouldn't be done without a global perspective, especially in a country like Spain where international travel and communication is so common. Although in most European countries emergency lights are blue, I'm fine with all red and amber+red. But all amber... that really doesn't seem like a good idea.

    • @juanemergencias
      @juanemergencias 7 років тому +1

      They have already passed the Law so that the lights are blue

  • @benjaminleschaeve9287
    @benjaminleschaeve9287 7 років тому

    Super vidéo comme d'habitude et vivement la suite

  • @thunderbear0
    @thunderbear0 7 років тому +3

    Oh nice

  • @112Oosthuizen
    @112Oosthuizen 7 років тому +1

    Nice!

  • @maxter_paradise
    @maxter_paradise 3 роки тому +2

    In Galicia Federal Signal is losing protagonism, now spanish companies are mounting the lightning and sirens.

    • @Lucas2015yomismo
      @Lucas2015yomismo 3 роки тому +1

      Losing?
      All new vehicles of A Coruña Local Police are with FS Trafic Storm and FS Nanoleds, and Guardia Civil de Trafico still buying FS Trafic Storm, but sometimes the builder put the "spanish version" (ISAE Scorpio)

    • @maxter_paradise
      @maxter_paradise 3 роки тому +1

      @@Lucas2015yomismo yes, but i'm talking about sirens, not lightbars. Look at the national police, ambulances, civil guard...

    • @Lucas2015yomismo
      @Lucas2015yomismo 3 роки тому +1

      @@maxter_paradise of course, nacional police and civil guard: they don't have any federal signal lighbar so they dont have fs siren, they use osstan siren and lately they are using ISAE sirens. Most of the galician ambulances are made by Rodriguez López Auto, using his "own" technology, some ambulances are made by Emergencia2000 or others, but its weird to see federal signal, and the firetrucks are normally made by Veicar and Incipresa, with some vehicles done by Rosenbauer, Magirus, Bull Fuego or Flomeyca, I've only see federal signao in vehicles made by Bull Fuego and i think that its not a normal thinq

    • @maxter_paradise
      @maxter_paradise 3 роки тому

      @@Lucas2015yomismo I'm agree with you and that is what i was going to said. (The end of your comment)

    • @Lucas2015yomismo
      @Lucas2015yomismo 3 роки тому

      @@maxter_paradise but in the end, Galicia was never a federal signal user in general terms

  • @isakjohansson7134
    @isakjohansson7134 3 роки тому +2

    3:28 Is that pingu?

  • @yanakovalova8397
    @yanakovalova8397 3 роки тому +1

    I'm from spain and I thing the Policía Nacional is more agresive

  • @thunderbear0
    @thunderbear0 7 років тому +1

    And im first!

  • @Gingibus
    @Gingibus 7 років тому +5

    But why the orange ones! If a spanish come in italy he will give way to a street cleaner truck or a fruit transport truck... And he will think "Oh, the firemans are cleaning the streets! That's so strange!"

    • @El-Mengu
      @El-Mengu 7 років тому +8

      So you're saying Spain should make its traffic laws with Italian emergency lights in mind. Great logic, and not at all ethnocentric.

    • @Gingibus
      @Gingibus 7 років тому

      The point is simple, spain is the only one wich use yellow/orange as an emergency colour, wich means that the problem may is in spain, not in all the other countries. Then, i respect this decision, but is impossible to understand it for me, in the street many light are orange, including the turning lights of the veicles, so why should an emercency veichle use this colour? It's basically strange

    • @El-Mengu
      @El-Mengu 7 років тому +2

      The answer to that question is also simple. Because amber is the best colour for emergency lights, and this is science, not just an opinion. And you're wrong, the most used colour for emergency lights around the world is RED, not blue, so actually you and half of Europe are in the minority, and you are the problem. Not to mention you're wrong again about Spain being the only country where ambulances have amber lights, because Peru, Cuba, Mozambique, Dominican Republic, Equatorial Guinea and civil protection vehicles in Venezuela, Paraguay and other Hispanic-American countries have amber lights too. You may not understand the difference between law enforcement and emergency services, but most countries in the world make this distinction (for example USA with red/blue law enforcement and red emergency services). And you may not be aware that emergency lights are used for *more than just responding to a call*, such as on-scene identification, recognition, patrol, command posts just to name a few, but we do. Ambulances are not police cars, and giving them the same lights is plain stupid and dangerous.

    • @Gingibus
      @Gingibus 7 років тому

      Ok... this is a point of view, i respect that, obviously the first comment had a sarcastic intent... but yeah i can understand your answer, in my idea all the emergency veicles, and i say emergency, so all the types of veicles which needs priority, have to use blu lights, becouse is the most visible one, i mean, all cars have red and orange lights, so why should i use the same colour of all the cars for an emergency one.. so i think blue is the best, in the street there arent blue lights, so for me this is the best way...

    • @El-Mengu
      @El-Mengu 7 років тому +4

      Well, red, yellow, green and blue are common on Spanish roads (there are blue LED parking signs everywhere in cities), and I never had a problem knowing when a priority vehicle, be it law enforcement with blue lights or an emergency vehicles with amber lights was approaching me, even with the sirens off. The intensity of the lights, the flash pattern and contrast with other lights present on the road leave no room for confusion, they're just almost impossible to miss for normal drivers. And despite garbage/tow trucks having amber lights too, there's no confusion with fire trucks. The difference is in behaviour of the vehicle: if you see flashing amber lights at a distance in front of you, it doesn't matter if it's a fire truck or a tow truck, they're both stationary working on scene and our behaviour as drivers is the same; drive carefully. But if you see flashing amber lights behind you or coming at you from an intersection, be ready to expect an emergency vehicle; and chances are it will be using its siren if there's traffic. It works well this way, and the accident rate of Spanish emergency vehicles is the same as the rest of western Europe.