#1 make your lateral head cut #2 start your downside cuts left & right (6" below) the first cut #3 tie the two cuts together with a 45 degree diagonal cut.... the panel will then fall inwards. This can be accomplished in under 45 seconds.
@@notablediscomfort Allowing the panel to fall inwards has 2 benefits.... speeds up the entry process, provides chafing protection for advancing inter hoselines that are not drug over jaggedly cut structural framework. It can always be removed at a more advantageous opportunity.
@@mikefargo4339 Well in that case may as well just cut two big swipes on the sides and one at the top and push it in so the panel is still attached at the bottom.
I think the purpose of this exact technique is not to make a perfectly shaped entry point but to make the cutting itself safe for you and your colleagues, but I might be wrong
@@aventador82 I could be wrong, but im guessing they're talking about how they ripped the door completely off at then end. If the door still remained attached, they could use it as a means to control the flow path still.
Would it be wrong to just walk around it? All that cutting took so much work.
I was thinking the same.
I can smell a whoosh around the corner lmfao
r/wooosh
@@WoodCutr1 please tell me the joki g going over your head its is the joke and that you actually understood the joke
So now I know whose been breaking into my garage now.
Thank you for sharing brothers. I like the prop and the way you numbered the cuts. Well done.
Such a noble profession❤❤
why I was recommended this video, I dont think I will ever know 🤷♂
Great practice and training. Backdrafts are dangerous and when cut properly, can minimize the backdraft. .
#1 make your lateral head cut
#2 start your downside cuts left & right (6" below) the first cut
#3 tie the two cuts together with a 45 degree diagonal cut.... the panel will then fall inwards. This can be accomplished in under 45 seconds.
probably don't want the panel to fall inwards and be just another piece of debris inside the structure to watch out for
@@notablediscomfort
Allowing the panel to fall inwards has 2 benefits.... speeds up the entry process, provides chafing protection for advancing inter hoselines that are not drug over jaggedly cut structural framework. It can always be removed at a more advantageous opportunity.
That’s how I understood the process as well
3 cuts instead of 2 for the dame size hole.
@@mikefargo4339 Well in that case may as well just cut two big swipes on the sides and one at the top and push it in so the panel is still attached at the bottom.
Just make a door add some hinges get a doornob maybe add some glass or considering disabling collisions
👏
Inverted "v" cut would be better imho.
Doesn’t that defeat the purpose of the cut when you rip it off?
I think the purpose of this exact technique is not to make a perfectly shaped entry point but to make the cutting itself safe for you and your colleagues, but I might be wrong
@@aventador82 I could be wrong, but im guessing they're talking about how they ripped the door completely off at then end. If the door still remained attached, they could use it as a means to control the flow path still.
I would of just bought a new garage remote.
Don’t cut the lock and flip the door.
TOO SLOW..EVERYBODY IS DEAD
What the uck