Thank you. The first truck (PK1197) at 3:05 is carrying equipment for moving large amounts of water on scene, for example high volume pumps, large diameter hoses etc. Second one (PK105) at 5:16 carries mainly an empty flatbed as seen in the video. It allows the crane to be quickly deployed on scene because it has a grapple for removing roof structures on the burning house. At the fire station it also has different containers for large forest fires, oil spills on water and "catastrophe container" that has heavy rescue tools and special equipment for treating many patients on scene. Both units will respond to most of the large fires automatically and also to other calls by incident commanders request.
@@Markus_112 Thanks for the reply. Interesting and well thought out solution by the rescue department. In Estonia we also have container/hooklift trucks but rarely do they respond to building fires with anything other than water tank containers. Pump/hose containers I believe are deployed only on request by the commander. I think I left a similar question comment on another one of your great videos, feel free to disregards that one. Thanks again.
Nice video. What sort of equipment are the swapbody/container trucks brining? Are they a standard at medium and large fires?
Thank you. The first truck (PK1197) at 3:05 is carrying equipment for moving large amounts of water on scene, for example high volume pumps, large diameter hoses etc.
Second one (PK105) at 5:16 carries mainly an empty flatbed as seen in the video. It allows the crane to be quickly deployed on scene because it has a grapple for removing roof structures on the burning house. At the fire station it also has different containers for large forest fires, oil spills on water and "catastrophe container" that has heavy rescue tools and special equipment for treating many patients on scene.
Both units will respond to most of the large fires automatically and also to other calls by incident commanders request.
@@Markus_112 Thanks for the reply. Interesting and well thought out solution by the rescue department. In Estonia we also have container/hooklift trucks but rarely do they respond to building fires with anything other than water tank containers. Pump/hose containers I believe are deployed only on request by the commander.
I think I left a similar question comment on another one of your great videos, feel free to disregards that one. Thanks again.
You`re welcome. Unfortunately I couldnt find other comments from you on my videos, but I`m happy to answer if you have other questions.
Ei näytä kiire olevan
Eipä sitä kovin lujaa pääsekkään säiliöautolla jossa yli 10 tuhatta litraa vettä.