L10 135 ft ladder
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E129 & Foam 1
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S-374, 1983
Just a couple more from DC... Truck Co. 1’s 1983 Spartan/ Emergency One 135’ ladder. This 29-ton apparatus was 42’ huge and 11’ 9” high. It had a waterway piped to the 110’ level, equipped with a remote 1000 GPM tip. A powerful 8V-92TA Detroit Diesel (450 hp) powered the $388,500 monster. According to Curt Elie (Fire Apparatus Journal, and Wagon Pipe renown) of the Friendship Fire Association, this was the third 135 footer built by E\-One, and the second to go in service: No. 1 went to Galveston, Texas, FD and No. 2 was a demo at the time. Photo: June 1985, multiple Alarm at Bolling Airfield [/quote] <img src='http://www.firepics.net/groupboards/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/thumbsup.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=' ![]() How many remember the unique Federal model #174 beacons? (went back and forth, not revolve). As Chief Byrne said , this rig was a beast! Collection of Warren Jenkins
[quote name='Dr. Stinebaugh' post='92636' date='Mar 30 2007, 18:48 ']S-374, 1983
Just a couple more from DC... Truck Co. 1’s 1983 Spartan/ Emergency One 135’ ladder. This 29-ton apparatus was 42’ huge and 11’ 9” high. It had a waterway piped to the 110’ level, equipped with a remote 1000 GPM tip. A powerful 8V-92TA Detroit Diesel (450 hp) powered the $388,500 monster. According to Curt Elie (Fire Apparatus Journal, and Wagon Pipe renown) of the Friendship Fire Association, this was the third 135 footer built by E\-One, and the second to go in service: No. 1 went to Galveston, Texas, FD and No. 2 was a demo at the time. Photo: June 1985, multiple Alarm at Bolling Airfield <img src='http://www.firepics.net/groupboards/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/thumbsup.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=' ![]() How many remember the unique Federal model #174 beacons? (went back and forth, not revolve). As Chief Byrne said , this rig was a beast! Collection of Warren Jenkins[/quote] I believe that model Beacon Ray was called the Reverse-o- Ray. Thank you, Warren, for the good photo of Truck 1! Continuing the Truck chronology in this thread... S-375 and S-376, 1987 Through a story too long to put here, what was originally spec’d out as tillers became a pair of rear mounts delivered in 1987 at $300,000 apiece. This was a new experience for the DCFD. The aerials were 110’, four-section aluminum construction. Unlike the Pirsch ladders, which were riveted, these were welded. They had no prepiped waterways, as did previous aerials. Shop No. S-375 went to Truck 17 and S-376 to Truck 5 (very briefly, then T-15 for the rest of its life). Photo is T-17 on the apron, September 1987.
Kevin Byrne
Kevin Byrne
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