- Joined
- Feb 4, 2010
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- 878
truckman said:What's the ratio of engines to ladders over there in ireland. For example fdny has around 200+ engines and 143 ladders. Rough estimate is ok. Thanks
IRISH said:truckman said:What's the ratio of engines to ladders over there in ireland. For example fdny has around 200+ engines and 143 ladders. Rough estimate is ok. Thanks
Roughly truckman Ireland id say has 250-300 Engines and 30-35 Ladders. A lot of the ladders though are your equivalent of the "Quint" Engine / Ladder
fdny1075k said:IRISH said:truckman said:What's the ratio of engines to ladders over there in ireland. For example fdny has around 200+ engines and 143 ladders. Rough estimate is ok. Thanks
Roughly truckman Ireland id say has 250-300 Engines and 30-35 Ladders. A lot of the ladders though are your equivalent of the "Quint" Engine / Ladder
Just to put into perspective, it looks like the City of Dublin Fire Brigade has 14 Fire Stations with 20 Engines(Pumpers), 4 Ladders(Aerials/Aerial Platforms), 2 Rescues, 2 Tankers, 1 Incident Command Unit, 2 Foam Units, 1 Water Supply Unit, and numerous Ambulances and smaller units.
The City of Cork has 7 Engines(Pumpers), 3 Ladders(Aerials/Aerial Platforms), 3 Rescues, 1 Haz-Mat. Unit, 1 Tanker, and smaller units in 2 Fire Stations.
The City of Limerick has 4 Engines(Pumpers), 2 Ladders(Aerials/Aerial Platforms), 1 Rescue, 1 Tanker, and smaller units in 1 Fire Station.
The City of Galway has 3 Engines(Pumpers), 1 Ladder(Aerial Platform), 1 Rescue, 1 Tanker, 1 Haz-Mat. Unit, and several smaller units in 1 Fire Station.
CFDMarshal said:The City of Galway has 3 Engines(Pumpers), 1 Ladder(Aerial Platform), 1 Rescue, 1 Tanker, 1 Haz-Mat. Unit, and several smaller units in 1 Fire Station.
fltpara16 said:raybrag: I was only picking on the roto-ray, I too think they are a big part of our American Fire Service culture. Several of the Engines I have served on over the years have or had roto-rays. One night we were responding to a call on Interstate 95 when the three light head separated from the shaft. The whole light assembly spun away from the apparatus and was last seen flying into the woods, never to be found. One less roto-ray! My big complaint is we have outstanding warning equipment on an apparatus with only three personnel responding to jobs. It would be nice to fill at least one more of the empty seats on the companies!
Fire Ireland: what is the minimum manning on your engines and aerial apparatus?
Engines are 5 man. Aerial's are 2 man