[/quote]I was wondering why the junk yard is the "High Bidder" on FDNY rigs nowadays? You rarely see, (never see) anyone rehabbing these towers and ladders for a second life. Is it because of the federal grant money everyone seems to be getting to purchase new rigs? Scrapping these units seems like such a waste.
Is this a 75' or 95'??? There use to be a guy who would buy up these and either rebuild them or take the chassis and make Tanker/Pumpers out of them. I think he went out of business but it sucks to them scraped
that started after 9/11 with the paranoia that a terrorist would get a rig and use it to gain access somewhere if it were still striped. funny, DCAS had no issue with selling garbage trucks to anyone who wanted one. I still cant see the logic there, after all you could pack a garbage truck with alot more than you could a fire truck, and where do you think all the garbage is picked from in midtown? in loading docks under the buildings... mass paranoia...
I was just thinking the same thing, maybe we're both wrong? Also, with everything taken off... not the box on the roof.
Question of curiousity here, I understand painting over the logos, probably just as easy as peeling them off, but why take the time to go all the way down the truck over the stripes when it's de-commisioned? You can tell it's an FDNY rig, stripes or not, and if someone wants to restore the truck and put the stripes back on they will. More work for a truck that's going to the wayside.
Yeah, if thats a 75-footer then somebody could use it for a refurb/remount on a new rig and prevent another great Mack from going by the wayside.
I don't know what the issue is with Brookfield, but they just enjoy trashing rigs, it seems. Forget which rig it was, but I was told once that somebody tried to rescue one from the scrap heap....offered the cash equivalent of what it would be worth in scrap, and was turned down.
Yeah, if thats a 75-footer then somebody could use it for a refurb/remount on a new rig and prevent another great Mack from going by the wayside.
I don't know what the issue is with Brookfield, but they just enjoy trashing rigs, it seems. Forget which rig it was, but I was told once that somebody tried to rescue one from the scrap heap....offered the cash equivalent of what it would be worth in scrap, and was turned down.
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I know I tried to purchase Pleasantville, NY old 1980 Hahn from Brookfield, no deal.
As fore the Rescue, I think that was re-stripped by its new owners.
Maybe it is not Ex-Ladder 30, although on the box behind the ladder (on the turntable) as stenciled "Truck 30", was "SL 9401" L-30?
Goon, there are a number of departments in my area that love their Smeals but they're all suburban and use the heavy duty aerials. I've never worked off one so I can't and won't offer an opinion, sucks your job is having so many issues with the ladders. I was wondering if you knew what kind of maximum tip load yours has, also, they only have the rear set of jacks right? stay low and keep finding a way to work around the problems.
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Our tip load is 250 which is the same as our seagraves and we have just the rear set of jacks
that started after 9/11 with the paranoia that a terrorist would get a rig and use it to gain access somewhere if it were still striped. funny, DCAS had no issue with selling garbage trucks to anyone who wanted one. I still cant see the logic there, after all you could pack a garbage truck with alot more than you could a fire truck, and where do you think all the garbage is picked from in midtown? in loading docks under the buildings... mass paranoia...
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Thanks Mike! That "makes sense" to me, not so much that the idea itself makes sense, but the explanation that you gave me, I can see where that would come from. As you said, what's not to keep someone from purchasing new stripes? Look at how many departments around the country run similar designs.
Just saw Squad 61 in Manhattan over on 3rd Ave. Is it out of service - as it did not have any hose loaded in the hose bed, etc. I know its a Bronx company.