International
Standards | Glossary of Firefighting
Equipment
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Contents: Top · 0–9
A B
C D
E F
G H
I J
K L
M N
O P
Q R
S T
U V
W X Y
Z
A
- Adapter: plumbing accessories
for connecting hoses and pipeds of incompatible
diameter, thread, or gender. See
also reducer, increaser,
double male, double female,
water thief. May contain
combinations, such as a double-female
reducer. Adapters between multiple hoses
are called wye, Siamese,
or distributor, which see
below.
- Aerial apparatus: fire truck,
meeting National Fire Protection Association
(NFPA) Standard 1901, Motor Fire Apparatus,
Chapter 6 and Chapter 18, having a multi-section
extending ladder, raised using power
shifted from the truck's propulsion
engine. May also carry other portable
ladders and tools.
- Aerial Firefighting Elevating Platform:
An extending or articulating power-operated
boom mounted on a fire truck with a
basket or bucket on the upper end designed
to carry firefighters to heights for
fire suppression or rescue, powered
by the truck's propulsion engine, and
meeting NFPA 1901 Standard For Automotive
Fire Apparatus, Chapter 6 and Chapter
18, Section 18.7.
- Air monitoring meter: electronic
device for measuring the presence of
one or more chemicals in air, such as
oxygen, carbon monoxide, hydrogen sulfide
or volatile organic compounds; may have
preset danger threshold alarms.
- Airbags: (1) inflatable device
used for lifting or spreading; (2) vehicle
safety device with potential explosion
hazard during vehicle extrication if
not already blown.
- Airpack: jargon for self-contained
breathing apparatus (SCBA).
- Apparatus: Fire Apparatus is
divided into seven categories by NFPA
Standard 1901: Pumper Fire Apparatus,
Initial Attack Apparatus, Mobile Water
Supply Apparatus, Aerial Apparatus,
Quint Fire Apparatus, Special Service
fire apparatus, and Mobile Foam fire
apparatus, and each category is defined
in detail by the NFPA Standard to which
all fire apparatus must be constructed
in the United States. Note: There is
no separate category for Rescue Truck;
rescue trucks are covered under Special
Service Apparatus.
- Appliance:Term for fire suppression
equipment used by firefighters to manage
or direct a water stream.
- APW: Air-pressurized water
fire extinguisher, partially filled
with water and then pressurized with
an air pump; popular in the US in the
2 1/2-gallon size, rated 2A.
- Aqueous Film-Forming Foam (AFFF)
(pronounced "A-Triple-F",
also called "Class B"): bubbles
that act as surfactant to coat and penetrate
ordinary fuels (e.g., wood, paper) to
prevent them from burning at normal
temperatures; also used on "Class
B" (oil/gasoline) fires to spread
a non-volatile film over the surface
of the fuel. Applied using eductor
or Compressed air foam system
(CAFS) and pumped through fire hose
to a foam nozzle (or sometimes
a less-effective fog nozzle).
- Attack hose: (Attack Line)
A use classification of a fire fighting
hose connected to output of a pump or
other pressure source (e.g., gravity).
Firehose used to apply water or other
fire fighting agent directly to a fire
or burning substance. Typically of 2
1/2 inches (65 mm) diameter
or less in the United States. Historically
1.5 inch hose was the primary initial
attack line but has been supplanted
in most of the US by 1.75 inch
diameter hose which will flow 175 gallons
per minute. Two-inch hose is available
as an option.
- Attic ladder: narrow, collapsible
ladder used to access an attic space
via a scuttle hole, which are often
found in closets and other narrow passages.
Also known as a closet ladder, folding
ladder or "pencil ladder."
Required to be carried on pumpers by
NFPA 1901.
- Automatic sprinkler: system
of pipes serving fire sprinklers, for
automatically directing water to a fire
when the sprinkler is heated to its
actuation tempereature (usually 155
deg F). The piping may be normally pressurized
with water ("wet") or with
air ("dry"), depending upon
the application. When a sprinkler-head
(or heat sensor) detects heat from a
fire, the sprinkler opens, automatically
spraying water onto the fire area.
B
- Big Guns: Reference the term
applied to high volume water/foam delivery
devices typically associated with Footprint(TM)
process methodologies for storage tank
firefighting.
- BA: Royal Navy abbreviation
for Breathing Apparatus. Otherwise known
as SCBA.
- Bed Section: the non-extending
section of an extension ladder.
- Bomb Line: A preconnected
attack line, typically 2 1/2 inch
in diameter, used in the same manner
and purpose as a Trash Line.
Bomb Lines are stored either on the
front bumper of the apparatus or in
an exterior (exposed) side well. Bomb
Lines are typically shorter length than
Cross Lays, and are intended for use
against dumpster fires, etc, where a
longer length of hose (and consequent
rebedding after the suppression is complete)
is not desired.
- Booster hose: Small-diameter
fire hose (3/4–1 inch), often carried
on booster reel, preconnected
to pump of an engine (and the booster
tank) for putting out small fires
near the truck without having to connect
to a fire hydrant; easily recovered
with a motorized reel. Also known as
"red line" for the common
red rubberized outer layer. Booster
hose is also used for High Pressure
Fog (HPF) applications.
- Branch Pipe: See Nozzle
- Bresnan cellar nozzle: Rotating
nozzle tip having two or more outlets
forming water jets that propel the tip
while spraying water in a circular pattern;
conveniently attached to several feet
(a meter) of rigid pipe with handles
or legs for supporting the nozzle while
it is suspended through a hole in the
floor above.
- Bulk tank: Large tank designed
to be transported to an incident and
left; larger than a tote tank.
- Bunkers (or "bunker
gear"): colloquial term for
protective pants and boots kept near
a firefighter’s bunk (cot) for rapid
deployment; more modernly includes firefighting
jacket. Basis for command to "Bunker
up!" in preparation for hazardous
duties. May also refer to entire protective
clothing ensemble. Also known as "turnouts"
or "turnout gear."
C
- Cellar fire: Cellar fires are
difficult to attack directly because
firefighters have to pass through the
hot gasses and smoke accumulated on
the cellar's ceiling to gain access
to the cellar space. Cellars typically
do not have good emergency egress points,
adding to the danger.
- Cellar pipe: Cellar Nozzle.
The Bresnan Nozzle is a distributing
type nozzle that is inserted through
an opening in the floor and into the
space below, typically a basement or
cellar. The nozzle directs a broken
stream horizontally, either extinguishing
or controlling the fire enough to allow
a direct attack to be safely made. The
Baker Cellar Pipe consists of an smoothbore,
straight stream nozzle on the end of
a brass pipe 36-inches long or more
that can be remotely angled from the
floor above by firefighters to direct
the stream to the desired cellar location.
- Charged line: fire hose under
pressure from the pump at the engine.
- CFA 3-Thread: A type of coupling
used by the CFA, it is used mainly on
the Australian 64 mm hose, it provides
a very secure coupling, obviously the
threading of the coupling is repeated
3 times, it is non-hermaphrodite.
- Check valve: see backflow
preventer
- Cistern: underground water
storage tank that is intended for firefighting
use in areas with inadequate water supply.
- Class A, B, C, D, K: Classes
of fire extinguisher and corresponding
type of fire they extinguish.
- Closed-circuit SCBA: See
SCBA.
- Closet hook: pike pole under
5 ft long
- Closet ladder: See Attic
ladder.
- CO2 extinguisher:
Fire extinguisher that releases carbon
dioxide gas to displace oxygen to smother
and cool a fire, such as a flammable
liquid.
- Combination nozzle: A low pressure
Fog Nozzle (usually 120 to 150
lbf/in˛ or 820 to 1030 [[kilopascal|kPa))
that can be adjusted to produce a near
straight stream. Also commonly
referred to as a Taskforce Tip
(TFT).
- Compressed Air Foam System (CAFS):
A water / surfactant (foam) mixture,
with compressed air forced into the
mix. The result is a very homogeneous,
small "air bubble" distribution;
the resulting suppression agent is the
consistency of soggy shaving cream,
consisting of relatively pure surface
area and little actual water. CAF is
gaining favor in selected compartmental
fire scenarios because of its high (explosive)
conversion rate, on top of the penetrative
advantages of the surfactant. It is
also inappropriate for many fire scenarios
because of that conversion rate, as
an unmanaged steam expansion path will
cook the firefighters. Secondary advantages
are a graceful degradation during equipment
failure; CAFs, without a compressed
air supply, emit classic foam; without
foam, water.
D
- Deck gun: A master stream
device mounted to top deck of pumper.
- Delivery: Term for any hose
which conveys water onto a fire e.g.
each outlet from a fire appliance supplies
a delivery with water.
- Deluge gun: A master stream
device that can be positioned on the
ground based on the need of the incident
commander.
- Deluge system: Type of sprinkler
system in which sprinkler heads
do not have individual valves, and the
water (or other extinguishing agent)
is disbursed from all sprinkler heads
simultaneously when a central (or zoned)
valve is triggered by a sensor (or manually).
Typically reserved for industrial areas
where rapid fire spread must be prevented
at the cost of damaging non-burning
materials.
- Denver Door opener: heavy pry
bars connected with a hinge, one with
an adjustable foot, used for prying
open doors.
- Denver tool (also called
TNT tool): A combination axe, sledgehammer,
pry tool, ram, and D-handle pull tool
used to gain forcible entry to buildings,
automobiles, etc. during emergency situations.
- Detection system: See Alarm
system.
- Detergent foam: See Aqueous
Film Forming Foam.
- Distributor pipe: Portion of
fire hydrant or sprinkler system connecting
main loops to smaller loops where outlets
are located.
- Double female: fire hose adapter
for connecting two "male"
couplings together; may also adapt different
sizes on either side.
- Double male: hose coupling
adapter with two male-threaded connectors
back-to-back; used for connecting two
female couplings together.
- Dry chemical: A fire extinguishing
agent. It works by breaking the chemical
chain reaction in the "fire tetrahedron".
- Dry hydrant: A fire hydrant
with a valve located at the bottom of
the barrel, near the water main. The
barrel of the hydrant remains dry until
used. The prevents the hydrant from
freezing in sub-zero temperatures. A
dry hydrant is also an unpressurized
pipe that can be used to draft (or draw)
water from a pond or lake.
- Dry powders: Fire extinguishing
agents for use on flammable metals.
Each agent is typically designed for
use on either a single metal or very
similar metals.
- Dry sprinkler: A sprinkler
system having pressurized air (rather
than water) in the distribution pipes
until a heat-activated sprinkler head
opens and releases the stored air pressure,
which in turn opens the main water valve
(and possibly an accelerator valve)
to flow water to the open sprinler(s);
used where the protected premises are
not heated during freezing temperatures.
- DSU: Distress Signal Unit another
term for a type of PASS device.
E
- Eckert hook: Sharp hook on
pike pole for cutting metal siding
or roofs.
- Engine: A truck outfitted for
firefighting, specifically one outfitted
to pump water. Generally, vehicles outfitted
to pump water are called engines,
while those which do not pump water
(ladder trucks, tankers, rescues, for
example) are not. Many rural fire engines
carry a reservoir of water to pump,
and use drafting and tankers to obtain
further supply. Historically, an "enjin"
was a machine that only pumped water.
- Eductor: Venturi device through
which water flows under 200 psi pressure
to create a partial vacuum in tube attached
at 90-degrees and open to the water
stream passing overhead. The vacuum
draws liquid foam concentrate from a
reservoir to mix it with the water stream
through a metering device on the discharge
side of the eductor where a firefighting
hose is connected. Typically the 200
psi inlet water pressure is reduced
to 95 psi discharge pressure as a result
of the narrowness of the venturi in
the eductor device.
- Ejector: see Smoke ejector.
- Ejector Pump: Pumps that use
the venturi principle to pump water
on a fire ground. Can be used for salvage
by removing flood waters or supply water
to a fire appliance from an open water
source. Water in the appliance is used
to supply a flow of water to the ejector
pump which uses high pressure nozzles
to entrain an increased volume of water
in the hose returning to the fire appliance.
- Elevator key: control panel
override key to take elevator car to
desired floor. May also refer to special
tool used to open elevator shaft-protection
doors from outside.
- Encapsulated suit: HAZMAT protective
clothing used with SCBA inside the suit
to protect a firefighter (HAZMAT technician)
from gaseous contaminants. Also known
as a Gas Suit.
- Encoder: (1) Device for converting
an input to a coded output; (2) tone-generating
system for broadcasting one or more
tone codes on a radio frequency to alert
selected pagers and alarms; (3) alarm-system
component that transmits coded sensor
and subscriber information to a monitoring
center to be processed into address
and alarm-type information.
- Extension ladder: A 20–60 foot
ladder with one or more movable sections
that extend beyond a base section, typically
using a halyard rope and pulley mechanism
for lifting and locking cams to latch
the moving sections at a selected height.
- Extinguisher: Device containing
fire suppressant, often pressurized
to expel suppressant when triggered
by operator or an automatic release
mechanism. Important to properly select
type of extinguisher appropriate to
type of material burning (wood, grease,
electrical, etc). May be portable or
permanently installed for special suppression
purposes, such as fires in aircraft
engines, restaurant exhaust hoods, or
computer rooms.
- Extrication gloves: Work gloves
designed for vehicle extrication and
other rescue applications, but not rated
for firefighting. They resemble mechanics
gloves but are made of tougher material,
often Kevlar, and designed to protect
against cuts from glass and metal.
F
- Footprint(TM): Application method
for extinguishing large diameter storage
tank fires or fuels in product depth.
- Fire alarm control panel: System
for receiving and announcing location
of fire based upon input from smoke,
flame or heat detectors, or manual call
points or pull stations.
- Fire axe: There are two main
types of axes used in firefighting,
a flathead axe, which just has a wedge
for cutting into objects. The second
type is a pickhead axe which has a cutting
wedge on one side, and then a pointed
pick for penetration of objects.
- Fire department keys: Special
keys provided to firefighters to access
a Knox Box or other lockbox, located
on some commercial buildings, containing
additional keys required for entry or
other safety features.
- Fire extinguisher: See Extinguisher
above.
- Firefighting motorcycle: A
motorcycle that are equipped to fight
fires or used as support. Commonly used
in Japan.
- fire hose: See also hose,
below.
- Fire hydrant: See hydrant.
- Fireman's key: keys used for
manually operating elevators during
fires to prevent occupied elevators
from answering calls from floor call
buttons and potentially opening on fire
floors exposing elevator occupants to
fire. Keys vary by manufacturer.
- Fire pump a pump installed
in a building specifically for sprinkler
and standpipe water systems.
- Fire station alert system:
fire department dispatching system using
radio controls to activate remote signals
at designated fire stations and to transmit
emergency information via audio or digital
channels.
- Fire streams: Water (possibly
mixed with foam) emitted at nozzle and
directed at burning materials.
- Fit 5: Handheld fire suppression
device designed to be thrown into needed
area. Fit stands for Fire Interruption
Technology. Effective against Class
A, B, or C fires.[1]
- FFFP: Fluoroprotein film forming
foam.
- Fly: The moving portions of
an extension ladder.
- Fog nozzle: A nozzle that discharges
water in small droplets. Often, the
nozzles are adjustable, permitting the
pattern to range from a straight stream
to a narrow fog to a wide fog stream.
Can also be designed to automatically
adjust pressure depending upon selected
pattern.
- Fog Stream: A fire stream characterized
by small droplets of water. The droplets
are unable to travel very far, but absorb
heat very quickly because of the high
surface area they present.
- Foot valve: Backflow
preventer at inlet of suction
hose used in drafting; helps
avoid losing prime by keeping
water from running back out of the suction
hose.
- Fully Involved: Commonly referred
to as a structure fire that is showing
fire and smoke in greater than 50% of
the structure.
G
- Glas-Master tool: brand of
specialized vehicle extrication tool,
most notably including a glass cutting
saw for removal of automobile windshields.
- Gamewell: brand of wind-up,
fire alarm telegraph system for sending
coded pulses to alert central alarm
station of fire alarm activation; often
still found in red boxes on street corners.
- Gate valve: See also "Hydrant
Gate". Valve in which the shutoff
device slides across the flow of liquid
to obscure the orifice, usually activated
by a screw mechanism. Compare "ball
valve."
- Gravity tank: Water storage
tank for fire protection; arranged above
protected area to provide flow of water
by gravity when needed.
- Green line: a garden hose.
- Fire grenade: glass bottle
filled with carbon tetrachloride or
similar fire extinguishing fluid; meant
to be thrown and shatter at base of
fire to mix with air to produce non-combustible
mixture; Similar to extinguishers made
of glass fixtures with spring-loaded
clapper released by heat-fusible link.
Limited effectiveness, and phased out
in 1950s when better extinguishers became
available.
- Ground ladder: A portable ladder
designed to rest on the ground. Compare
aerial ladder and roof ladder.
H
- Halligan tool (or "Hooligan"):
forcible entry tool with a pointed pick
and a wedge at right angles on one end
of a shaft and a fork or cat's paw at
the opposite end. Used in combination
with maul or flat-headed axe for forcing
padlocks, doors and windows. Based upon
original design by Hugh Halligan of
FDNY. Forms "the irons"
when nested with a flathead axe. Various
shaft lengths provide mechanical advantage.
Derived from the claw tool (fork
and hook).
- Halon: chemical gas fire extinguishing
or liquid agent for diminishing the
combustion reaction rate by acting as
a thermal ballast; used mainly in closed
computer rooms, aircraft, and other
high-value installations where corrosive
chemicals or water extinguishers are
judged inappropriate. Effective at low
concentrations (5%) as compared with
CO2 (34%). Being phased out
with suitable replacements in most applications,
with very restricted exemptions, due
to international environmental concerns
with this and other CFCs.
- Halyard: utility rope for raising
or lowering moving parts of extension
ladder.
- Hard suction hose: Non-collapsible
sections of hose, usually 10 feet
(3.0 m) long, used when drafting.
- Helmet: developed in the early
1800s, the original firefighter helmets
were felt caps and did nothing more
than keep water off the firefighters
face. Later editions of the fire helmet
included leather, metal, fiberglass,
and most departments are currently using
a form of plastic composite. More information
under Bunker gear.
- Higbee cut ('Higby cut': A
tapered thread termination in a firehose
coupling for avoiding cross-threading,
the location of which is indicated by
a notch cut into a single lug on a hose
coupling. If the notches are aligned
on mating couplings, the Higbee cuts
are aligned and the threads will immediately
engage when the swivel fitting is turned.
- High Pressure Fog (HPF): A
suppression technique consisting of
finely atomized water droplets at several
hundred pounds per square inch of pressure.
By far, one of the most efficient suppression
techniques available. Advantages include
a *very* high conversion rate, unmatched
atmospheric cooling and control of thermal
layers, very little wasted water (and
consequent water damage), and
the ease of managing a small diameter
booster line (defined above)
during application. Disadvantages are
lack of distance, lack of penetration
into various materials, and high risk
of burns to the attack crew. HPF is
quite popular in Europe, but was discarded
in the U.S. due to different building
construction and the resulting increase
in disadvantages.
- High-rise pack: Hose bundle
prepared for carrying to a standpipe
in a high-rise building, usually consisting
of 50 or more feet of 1 3/4-inch hose
and a combination nozzle.
- Hook: forged steel hook at
end of insulated pole of varying lengths;
used for piercing and pulling building
materials away from walls and ceilings.
Similar to nautical gaff hook. Short
hook with a pointed tip is a pike
pole; longer hook on a San Francisco
hook; two offset hooks on either
side of tip is a universal hook;
long p-shaped hook is a Boston rake
for pulling plaster and lath; short
hook with claw on opposite side of tip
is either a gypsum hook or the
narrower ceiling hook; pike pole
with a short handle is a somewhat useless
closet hook.
- Hose: flexible conduit for
moving liquids under pressure; made
of various materials including cotton,
rubber or plastic (such as PVC); construction
may be braided, woven, wrapped or extruded,
often in layers (liner and jacket);
hose construction and size differs according
to its intended use (e.g., hard suction,
attack, forestry, booster); typically
stocked in standard lengths and coupled
together with standardized fittings.
See hose coupling.
- Hose bed: part of fire engine
(or hose wagon) where hose is stored
for transport and easy access; stocked
in layers or rows for quick selection
of the desired length, diameter and
type of hose; may include hoses "pre-connected"
to pump outlets on the engine.
- Hose bridge: mechanical ramps
permitting vehicle tires to roll over
top of hose without pinching or damaging
the hose. Sudden hose-pinch can cause
dangerous backpressures in a running
hose and at the pump and release of
the pinch can cause a staggering surge
at the nozzle end.
- Hose cart: See Hose wagon.
- Hose coupling: rigid interlocking
end-pieces on fire hose; used for connecting
hose to hydrants or fire engine
pumps and other hose appliances (nozzles,
wyes, manifolds, strainers, etc); standardized
sizes and threads or other (non-threaded)
pressure-sustaining interlocks (e.g.,
"Storz" or other "quarter-turn"
connectors); lugs, cams, or pins are
used to tighten and loosen couplings
by hand or with a hose wrench.
- Hose roller: rigid frame with
rollers designed to fit over windowsill
or roof parapet to prevent chafing as
hose is pulled across it. Can also refer
to a machine designed for rolling hoses
in preparation for storage.
- Hose strap: Similar in purpose
to a Rope Hose Tool, a hose strap
is typically a single closed loop of
nylon webbing, which can be secured
to a hose via a girth hitch to aid with
hose control and movement.
- Hose tower: structure for hoisting
hoses to permit them to drain and dry.
- Hose wagon: a handcart, vehicle,
or trailer adapted for storing and hauling
hose and related equipment; used by
industrial fire brigades with large
buildings, or where supplemental hoses
are needed beyond that normally carried
on a fire engine; also used for taking
attack hose into a high-rise and for
returning dirty, wet hose to the station
instead of loading the hose bed
with the along with dirt and corrosive
moisture. Vehicular hose wagon
may carry 1,000 to 3,000 feet (910 m)
of hose. May also include small booster
pump.
- Hose wrench: tool for holding
hose couplings against opposite turning
forces (tighten/loosen); may be one
of several designs for different shapes
of cleats or lugs on couplings (round,
flat, recessed, etc), and also of different
sizes according to the couplings being
handled, and come in various combinations
to minimize the number of different
tools necessary on the fire ground.
Also known as a "Spanner wrench".
- HPF: See High Pressure Fog.
- Hurst tool: See Hydraulic
spreader.
- 'Hux tool: largely obsolete
hydrant wrench made of stamped
metal with holes sized for the hydrant
valve.
- Hydrant: pressurized water
source for fire engine. May also be
a "dry hydrant" for drafting
from static water source. Compare "standpipe".
- Hydrant Assist Valve: a valve
connected to the hydrant by the first
due engine allowing the second due engine
to boost the pressure in the intake
line. Used for hydrants with low pressure,
attaching multiple engines to one hydrant,
or boosting pressure in the intake line
to accommodate for friction loss.
- Hydrant Gate: A gate valve
used to control water flow through one
of the discharge ports on a hydrant
with two or more ports. Typically, one
fire hose is initially connected to
one discharge and the hydrant gate is
connected to one or more of the other
outlets. This allows a second hose to
be connected to a hydrant that is flowing
water without shutting down the main
valve to make the connection.
- Hydraulic Platform: An aerial
appliance which has an elevating platform
like a Cherry picker.
- Hydrant wrench: tool for opening
valve of fire hydrant; may be simple
spanner, box wrench, or adjustable wrench,
or a specialized tool for use on "anti-vandalism"
valves. For example, some valves require
a magnet to activate a cam in order
for the valve to be turned on.
- Hydraulic spreader, (Jaws of
Life): mechanical levering device with
hydraulic cylinders powered by a pump;
used for forcible entry or spreading
vehicle or structure parts to permit
extrication of a victim. Also
called Hurst Tool which is a
type that includes cutter and ram/jacking
features.
I
- IAFF: Acronym, "International
Association of Fire Fighters".
- IFSTA: Acronym, "International
Fire Service Training Association".
A major publisher of firefighter training
materials.
- Indian pump: (aka Indian
Tank) A brand of five-gallon water
can, or back-pack bladder, featuring
a short hose and hand pump for use in
wildland firefighting.
- Intake: Part of pump where
water enters when pump forms partial
vacuum.
- Irons, or Set of irons:
Pairing of a flat-head axe and a Halligan
tool. A common combination used in forcible
entry operations to gain access for
search and rescue as well as interior
fire attack.
J
- Jaws of Life: A Hurst tool.
See hydraulic spreader.
- J-bar: a stiff, j-shaped tool
for reaching an inside door handle.
- Jet siphon: A venturi
appliance used for moving large amounts
of water from one reservoir tank to
another by pumping a small amount of
pressurized water into the jet to create
a vacuum to move larger amounts of water.
- Jockey pump: A small pump connected
to a fire sprinkler system.
K
- K-tool: A forcible entry tool
for disabling cylinder locks; used with
a Halligan bar.
- Kelly tool: A prying tool much
like a Halligan tool without the right-angle
pointed tip.
- Knox Box: A box secured to
the outside (esp. of a commercial occupancy)
containing master keys, accessible by
a high-security key available to responding
firefighters.
L
- Ladder truck: A truck outfitted
with an apparatus-mounted aerial ladder,
not necessarily outfitted to pump water.
Not to be confused with engine.
Known as a "Turntable Ladder"
in the United Kingdom.
- Ladder pipe: Nozzle attached
to an aerial ladder and used
to direct heavy stream from advantageous
height.
- Landing Valve: Globe Valves
which be installed on hydrants branch
and hose is connected to coupling of
it.
- Large Diameter Hose: (LDH)
Fire hose with a diameter of 3 1/2 inches
or greater. LDH is typically used to
supply water from a fire hydrant to
fire apparatus such as an engine or
tanker.
- Leatherhead (helmet): a cover
or protetive device worn by fire fighters
in some countries, also slang denoting
a fire fighter.
- Left Handed Smoke Shifter:
A non-existent device used to torture
probationary firefighters during an
overhaul phase; a crew chief will send
his Probie to fetch one, but no such
device actually exists. Each truck the
probie visits will consequently "Not
have one", or "Another crew
just took it," but each truck operator
will know for certain that "THAT
truck might have one, over there..."
The process will repeat until the probie
has been to each truck looking for the
device, while the crew chief increasingly
chides him to "hurry up" over
the radio. Similar to military non-objects
such as Relative Bearing Grease or winter
air for tyres.
- Level A, B protective clothing:
Different levels of encapsulation of
firefighters used during HAZMAT
incidents to minimize contamination.
- Life net: Portable net for
attempting to catch victims falling
or jumping from upper floors of burning
structure.
- Life safety line: A rope used
where its failure could result in serious
injury; a rope used for connecting a
firefighter/rescuer to a fixed anchor
point or to another person.
- Light Water: An additive to
use with water in the extinguishing
of petroleum and similar fires.
- LMR: Abbreviation for Land
Mobile Radio. Component of New Zealand
Fire Service communicaitons system between
a communications centre and a fire appliance
over a radio network
M
- Mattydale: A volunteer fire
department, located north of Syracuse,
NY, credited with the invention of the
Mattydale Lay. The Mattydale
Lay is often simply referred to
as a "Mattydale", or (now)
a "Cross Lay". The engine
on which the Mattydale was invented
and installed is currently on display
at the FASNY museum; a brief blurb and
photo of the piece can be seen near
the bottom of http://www.fasnyfiremuseum.com/fireapparatus.php
.
- Mattydale Lay (Mattydale Load) :
The concept of storing preconnected
Attack Lines on an engine, as
well as storing them such that they
are presented at the sides of the apparatus
instead of the rear. Commonly called
a Cross Lay, the technique allows
for rapid deployment of attack lines
from either side of the apparatus.
- Medium-diameter hose: A hose
with diameter between 2˝ and 3 inches
(76 mm).
- Monitor: Firefighting delivery
designed to be established and then
left unattended. Typical uses include
ground monitors which can be established
to deliver water onto large fires or
provide a water curtain. Also known
as deluge guns. Deck Monitors tend to
be attended and used to deliver very
large water quantities onto the fire.
Also known as deck guns.
- Multigas detector: Measuring
device designed to indicate concentrations
of multiple (typically four) selected
gases, such as oxygen, carbon monoxide,
volatile organic compounds, hydrogen
cyanide, etc.
- MDT: Abbreviation for Mobile
Data Terminal, often a specialized
personal computer using a radio network
for data transmission between communication
centres and fire apparatus. Often connected
to Computer-assisted dispatch system.
May be used with a Global Positioning
System receiver to locate apparatus
and map routes to call locations.
N
- NFPA: National Fire Protection
Association. A standards and "best
practice" body for the fire service.
Slang: Not For Practical Application.
This is firefighter slang referring to
the seemingly 'useless' regulations of
the NFPA. This phrase is commonly used
by rural fire departments whose chiefs
or officers operate by traditional methods,
instead of "by the book"
Slang: No Free Publications Available,
referring to publications that "all
are encouraged to practice" yet are
prohibitively expensive, as in "That
standards document is NFPA." The
NFPA slang is typically used in smaller
fire departments, where such a purchase
would be a non-reimbursed out of pocket
personal expense. Q.v. http://webstore.ansi.org/ansidocstore/dept.asp?dept_id=3111
.
- NH: National Hose thread, also
known as NST (National Standard
Thread). Commonly used in fire hose
couplings, it has a slightly larger
thread diameter and coarser pitch (fewer
threads per inch) than the alternative
NPSH thread. The threads specified
in NFPA 1963 are "NH".[2]
- NIFTI: Naval InFrared Thermal
Imager. A device used aboard naval ships
to help locate hotspots where fire or
personnel may be located in a dense
smoke environment.
- Nozzle: A device attached to
the end of a fire hose that directs,
shapes and regulates the flow of the
water or fire fighting agent pumped
into the hose. May have a control valve.
Can also be referred to as a Branch
Pipe.
- Nozzle tip: Portion of firehose
that forms the fire stream as it leaves
the hose. Can be solid, fog, or other
specialty nozzle (e.g., piercing, Bresnan
cellar nozzle, wand tip, etc).
- NPSH: National Pipe Straight
Hose thread, also known as IPT
(Iron Pipe Thread, or International
Pipe Thread). Like NH threads,
NPSH threads are commonly used in fire
hose couplings, but the two types are
not interchangeable with each other
and cannot be connected together without
adapters. NPSH threads have a slightly
smaller diameter and more threads per
inch than NH, but NPSH hoses can be
fitted to NPT (National Pipe
Tapered) plumbing fixtures, as the diameters
and thread pitches are similar.[2]
O
- Open-circuit SCBA: See SCBA.
Exhaled air is not reused by the system.
- Outside stem and yoke valve (OS&Y):
Type of gate valve actuator arranged
such that the valve stem moves in and
out of the handle, thus externally indicating
whether the valve is open or shut, unlike
the more common gate valve wherein the
stem rotates and only the gate moves
up and down inside the fixture.
P
- Panic doors, panic hardware:
Fire safety appliance permitting locked
doors (typically self-closing) to be
opened from the inside when pressed
with sufficient force, thus permitting
a person to open the door without having
to turn a knob or lever.
- PASS device, personal alert
safety system: An alarm device which
signals that a firefighter is in trouble.
It can be activated manually by the
firefighter, or activates automatically
if the firefighter stops moving. May
be integral to SCBA or separately activated.
- Passport (accountability):
System in which each firefighter has
an identification document that is collected
by the person in charge of accounting
for the respective individuals in a
dangerous area, and returned to the
firefighter when he or she leaves the
dangerous area.
- Pike pole: See Hook.
- Penetrator Nozzle: A long narrow
nozzle with a hardened steel tip designed
to be forced through a wall or other
obstruction to deliver water to a fire
on the other side when other modes of
access aren't possible or carry an unacceptable
degree of risk. Also commonly used in
aircraft fires to rapidly deliver water
or foam to the interior of an aircraft.
- Pickheaded axe: Standard fire
axe having a 6 or 8 pound (2.7 to
3.6 kg) steel head with a cutting
blade on one edge and a square, pointed
pick on the opposite side. Come in various
handle lengths.
- Plec-Tron: Jargon, brand-name
of early radio-frequency paging system
for summoning firefighters.
- Pineapple:Tool used in order
to assist in suppressing a basement
fire.
- Pipeman:The firefighter who
is on the nozzle attacking the fire.
- Plug: Slang term for a fire
hydrant. This survives from the days
when water mains actually had holes
in the tops that were plugged. Many
firefighters would like to keep this
word while many others think it should
be replaced with the accurate term,
"hydrant".
- Pompier ladder:A style of ladder
that is also known as a "Scaling
Ladder". It is used to climb from
one window to another. It differs from
other ladders in that it does not rest
on the ground it instead uses a large
hook at the top to attach to a window
sill. The word "Pompier" is
French for fireman.
- Pony Section: A shorter length
of fire hose, especially large diameter
hose, used to connect an apparatus to
a hydrant or another apparatus.
- Portable water tank: Collapsible
reservoir used for storing water transported
to fireground by tanker.
May be inflatable or supported by a
frame.
- Positive pressure ventilation
(PPV): Ventilation of an area by the
use of a fan to push clean air into
that space and controlled use of openings
for the escape of smoke and gasses.
- Post indicator valve (PIV):
A type of valve used for underground
sprinkler shutoff, having a lockable
actuator atop a post with a window indicating
"open" or "shut"
status of the valve.
- Preconnect: Firehose
on a fire engine which has one
end connected to a pump outlet, and
usually a nozzle attached to
the other end. May also be a preconnected
inlet hose (e.g., soft suction).
Reduces steps at scene of fire.
- Pulaski: a tool which combines
an axe and a mattock in one head, similar
to that of the cutter mattock, with
a rigid handle of wood, plastic, or
fiberglass
- Pumper: Vehicle apparatus for
pumping water and other fire suppressants.
See fire engine.
Q
- Quint: Type of firefighting
apparatus with five defining attributes.
The Quint truck is both a Pumper
and a Ladder truck. A "Quint"
has: 1. a pump, 2. hose, 3. a water tank,
4. ground ladders, and 5. an aerial ladder.
R
- Rabbet Tool: A hand powered
portable hydraulic ram, specially designed
for insertion between a door and its
frame for rapid forcible entry.
- Red Line: See "Booster
Hose"
- Reducer: Plumbing adapter
for connecting hoses of two different
diameters; may also be double male
or double female connections
of different sizes.
- Relief valve: A valve set to
open at a specified pressure so as to
not exceed safe operating pressure in
hoses or pumps.
- Rescue Engine: A single piece
of fire apparatus that can operate as
either a rescue or an engine. This apparatus
normally is outfitted with heavy rescue
equipment, hoselines, pump, water tank,
etc.
- Ringdown (telephone): An Automatic
ringdown circuit consists of two phones
at different locations. When either
phone goes off-hook, the one at the
other end instantly rings.
- Ringdown (radio): A radio,
incorporating a selective calling capability,
has an attention-getting device triggered
by a dispatching center. A triggered
device emits a sound alerting staff
at a fire station, in an ambulance,
on a vehicular radio or at a vehicular
data terminal that an emergency call
is pending. The act of ringing down
a station may ring bells, activate a
klaxon, turn off gas-fired cooking appliances,
activate a volunteer alerting siren,
turn on lights, and activate loudspeakers
over which the call details are announced.
Some systems use the voice path of a
private line telephone circuit or a
voice channel on a microwave radio instead
of a two-way radio. Ringing down a vehicle
may cause the radio or data terminal
itself to beep continually until an
"acknowledge" button is pressed.
- RollNRack hose management system:
Drain, Roll and Load LDH with one simple
tool. [1]
- Rope hose tool: Short strap
or rope with a hooks at both ends for
wrapping around a charged hose to secure
it in position or to assist in moving
it.
- Roof ladder: A single-section
ladder with hooks on one end. The hooks
are put over the ridge or peak of a
roof to hold the ladder in place. Compare
with aerial ladder and ground
ladder.
S
- Salvage cover: Tarps used to
protect property (contents) during overhaul.
- SCBA: Self Contained Breathing
Apparatus, or air-pack,
worn by firefighters to protect against
breathing toxic fumes and smoke, or
where the air has insufficient oxygen.
Often incorrectly called "oxygen
mask" by laypersons. Typically
of open circuit style, with a
supply of compressed air, where expired
air is exhausted, rather than closed
circuit where it is filtered, re-oxygenated
from compressed oxygen, and inhaled
again — which is used where an air supply
is needed for an extended period (up
to four hours).
- Self-contained breathing apparatus:
see SCBA
- Shove knife: semi-rigid metallic
blade of various shapes and sizes used
for forcing spring latches during forcible
entry.
- Siamese: hose coupling for
merging two streams into one, i.e.,
two female coupling inlets and one male
coupling outlet.
- Skid Unit: A Skid Unit or Slip-On
is the common name used to refer to
a self-contained fire fighting rig that
includes hose, water tank, pump, and
an engine to drive the pump, all mounted
on a skid, designed to be slid into
or onto the open or flat bed of a suitable
truck.
- Slip-on: See Skid Unit.
- Small-diameter hose: Generally
accepted to be fire hose 3" or
less in diameter.
- Smoke detector: (1) part of
a fire alarm system that detects and
signals presence of smoke; (2) self-contained
household device for same purpose as
(1) but with its own noisemaking device.
- Smoke ejector: Powerful fan
for moving large amounts of air and
smoke as part of ventilation
task while fighting fire in a burning
structure. May be operated by electricity
or gas motor for positive or negative
pressure ventilation.
- Soda-acid extinguisher: Weak
water/acid solution inside a pressure
vessel which activates bicarbonate of
soda when triggered, expelling "water"
(mixture) under pressure from the resulting
carbon dioxide. Obsolete and often replaced
with an APW or multipurpose extinguisher.
- Soft suction hose, soft sleeve:
A short piece of fire hose, usually
10 to 20 feet (6.1 m) long,
of large diameter, greater than 2.5 inches
(65 mm) and as large as 6 inches
(150 mm), used to move water from
a fire hydrant to the fire engine, when
the fire apparatus is parked close to
the hydrant.
- Solid Stream: A fire-fighting
water stream emitted from a smooth-bore
nozzle. This fire-fighting stream has
the greatest reach and largest drops
of water.
- Spanner: rigid tool for tightening
or loosening firehose couplings.
- Special egress control device:
Locking device on doors used for delaying
opening for short period (10–15 seconds)
after release is pressed. Permitted
as panic hardware in limited
circumstances. May also refer to a security
system that releases electronic door
locks when a fire alarm is activated,
such as in stairwells of a high-rise
building.
- Spray nozzle: See fog nozzle.
- Sprinkler system: fire suppression
system in a building, typically activated
by individual heat-sensitive valves,
or remotely controlled by other types
of sensors, releasing water onto the
fire. May be "wet" (water-filled)
or "dry" (air-pressurized).
- Standpipe: system of pipes
inside a building for conducting water
for fire hose attachments; may be pressurized
with water ("wet") or remain
"dry" until activated in an
emergency; supplied either from a fire
hydrant attachment or from a fire engine's
pump. Permits firefighters to reach
higher levels of tall buildings without
having to run hoses up the stairs. Known
as "wet riser" and "dry
riser" respectively in the United
Kingdom.
- Steamer connection: A Siamese
inlet to a standpipe or sprinkler
system. Named for early application
of steam engines for pumps.
- Steamer outlet: Large outlet
of fire hydrant.
- Storz coupling: A type of coupling
used on fire hose. The coupling is sexless,
and secures with a 1/4 turn of the coupling.
The coupling may or may not have some
sort of locking device.
- Straight Stream: A fire-fighting
water stream generated by a combination
nozzle, characterized by a long reach
and large water drops. It is essentially
the narrowest of fog patterns that can
be produced.
- Strainer: 1) A large metal
device attached to the end of a suction
hose that prevents debris from entering
the hose or the pump when drawing water
from a pond or other body of water.
2) A stationary accumulation of debris
in a moving body of water.
- Stream Straightener: A smoothbore
pipe with baffles inside of the pipe.
Usually a stream straightener is used
on a master stream device between the
outlet housing of the device and a smooth
bore tip to reduce the agitation of
water traveling to the tip so as to
produce a better stream.
- Suction hose: A large, semi-flexible
and non collapsible hose used to move
water from a static source such as a
pond, pool or storage tank to a fire
pump by means of suction. The whole
process is often known as "drafting".
Should not be used to connect pressurized
hydrants to pumps.
- Supply line, supply hose, large-diameter
hose: fire hose, usually larger
than 2.5 inches (64 mm) in
diameter, used to transport water from
one source to another, such as from
a hydrant to a fire engine or from one
engine to another. Short pieces of this
hose used to attach to a hydrant are
often called "Soft Suction"
(see above).
T
- Tag accountability: System
in which each firefighter is issued
two identification tags, one of which
is then collected by a safety officer
and held while the firefighter is in
a hazardous area. To reclaim the tag,
the firefighter must present the matching
tag upon exit from the hazard. Any unclaimed
tags after an "event" (such
as a collapse or explosion) means the
corresponding firefighters are missing.
May be implemented as passport
system in which first tag is presented
to staging officer upon arrival (for
tracking) and second tag is held by
IDLH safety officer, as above.
- Tanker, Tender – Large, mobile
tank of water or other firefighting
agent; may be airborne, as used in wildland
firefighting, or truck-mounted. Essential
in rural areas lacking hydrants.
- Taskforce Tip: (TFT)
Task Force Tips a popular brand of adjustable
fog stream Combination Nozzle,
now a ubiquitous term for that type
of nozzle.
- Thermal imaging camera (TIC)
– Ruggedized infrared equipment used
by some firefighters to detect hidden
people, animals, heat sources (i.e.,
fire) and structural compromise.
- Tones : A series of two
or three musical notes, used as an auditory
alert over a radio or radio-paging system
to indicate that a particular fire company,
district, or territory is dispatched
to service on a particular incident.
- Toned out : A term used
to indicate when a fire company is or
was dispatched to an incident. See tones
above. Can be used in present tense
("We've been toned out, I've got
to go.") or past tense ("We
were toned out at 2300 on that run.")
- Tower ladder: See aerial
ladder.
- Trash Line: A preconnected
attack line that is typically 1
3/4" diameter, and stored either
on the front bumper of the apparatus
or in an exterior (exposed) side well.
Trash Lines are typically shorter length
than Cross Lays, and are intended
for use against dumpster fires, etc,
where a longer length of hose (and consequent
rebedding after the suppression is complete)
is not desired.
- Triple combination engine company
– apparatus carries water, pumps water,
carries hose and other equipment; firefighters
who may carry out direct attack or support
other engine companies.
- Triple Lay("Triple Fold",
"Triple Load") : A method
of loading preconnected attack line
into a hose bed or crosslay,
often facilitating rapid hose deployment
in a pre-flaked configuration.
- Truckie: A firefighter typically
responsible for tactical aerial operations,
ventilation, search, and overhaul.
- Turnout gear: The protective
clothing worn by firefighters, made
of a fire-resistant material such as
Nomex or Aramid, and designed to shield
against extreme heat. Sometimes called
bunker gear. See PPE.
Includes helmet, jacket and boots, and
some departments include fire-resistant
pants.
- Turntable – rotating base of
an aerial ladder that
permits the ladder to be elevated and
extended in any direction from a fixed
location.
U
- UL listing: A certification
standard. This listing means the product
has been safety certified by the Underwiter's
Laboratory.
- Utility rope: A rope not designed
or maintained for life safety purposes.
V
- Valve: mechanical means for
stopping and starting flow in a conduit;
many types used in firefighting, including
gate–, foot–, clapper– (backflow preventers),
sprinkler-heads, etc.
- Ventilation saw: A high-powered
saw with metal-cutting teeth or disc
for quickly making large openings in
roofing materials. Often, a chain saw
with an attached guard to limit the
depth of cut.
- Vlad K.: is used in football.
It's name of one Spartak's fan from
S.Petersburg, Russia
W
- Wall-indicator valve: Type
of control valve for sprinkler systems
which is mounted to an outside wall
and indicates "open" or "shut"
in an indicator window on the valve
body.
- Water curtain nozzle: A nozzle
designed to throw a fan of water droplets
to form a "curtain" in an
attempt to reduce radiated heat from
igniting a nearby exposure.
- Water flow alarm: An audible
alarm indicating that one or more sprinkler
heads have been activated.
- Water mist fire suppression
A sprinkler-like system that uses a
very fine mist featuring much lower
water flow than conventional sprinklers
to suppress, rather than extinguish,
a fire [2].
- Water tender: a vehicle that
contains a substantial tank of water
as well as a pump.
- Water thief (valve): Type of
gated wye having one or more
outlets smaller than the largest outlet.
- Wedges: Wooden blocks for temporary
shut-off of activated sprinkler heads
or holding doors open during firefighting
or rescue operations.
- Wet pipe sprinkler system:
Sprinkler system containing pressurized
water rather than air, such that water
will flow immediately upon release of
a heat-sensitive head.
- "Wet water": Water
into which a surface tension reducing
agent has been introduced. The resultant
mixture, with its reduced surface tension,
is more able to penetrate burning product
more deeply and extinguish deep seated
fire.
- Wye: hose coupling for splitting
one line into two or more outlets, often
a larger line split into two smaller
ones; often a gated wye having
separate valves for each outlet. Not
to be confused with Siamese,
which is used to bring two smaller lines
together into one.
Y
Z
- Z-adapter: Large hose appliance
for connecting supplemental pumps into
long supply lines, in the form of a
"Z"; may be improvised from
two gated wye valves and a double
female between two of the gated
outlets or from a siamese that has one
inlet connected to one outlet of a gated
wye.
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