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We have a fog nozzle and have found very few times when it wasnt on a straight stream. We cant change ours out to a straight tip per the manufacturer but it would have a smooth tip if we could. Our deck guns and ground monitors are all equipped with smooth tips. I dont see much use for a fog pattern other than for large exposure protection or as a makeshift decon shower. If you are using an aerial for a master stream you are gonna want the reach and the penetration of a straight stream.
Keep the stack tip on, and build a box or clamp for the fog stream that is at the end of the ladder.
It depends on what you do. If you like the area effect or do exposure protection, stay with the fog.
-Like you Larry I prefer to have the straight tip stack of nozzles on the master stream, after all the whole point of a master stream is to put out a lot of water. The fog is an interesting appliance for a master stream but really nothing more than just interesting. Someone once told me that fog nozzles on master streams do nothing but cool the thermal column for pigeons.
-As someone that is assigned to a ladder truck I will strongly disagree with your advice of building and attaching ANYTHING to the tip of the ladder. If you want to change out the nozzle, though I can't imagine why, that should be done while the ladder is bedded. -Changing anything in the air is needlessly dangerous to the firefighter and reckless. Not to mention that it is almost impossible to change out a master stream nozzle in the air. But, if the intent is to change out the nozzle on the ground than just carry the nozzle in one of the many, many compartments... it's what they're there for. -Furthermore if the "box" is to be easily accessible to a firefighter it must be mounted to the inside of the ladder which will unnecessarily reduce the access way on the ladder and create snag hazards for those attempting to use the ladder as an access device. Our policy is to no longer mount ANYTHING to an aerial ladder, especially within the ladder-way itself. The top fly section is already narrow, don't make it worse.
-If you mount such a box to the outside of the ladder you change the scrub characteristic of the aerial itself as well as adding a permanent torsional load to the aerial which will be unnecessarily detrimental and dangerous over the service life of the aerial and will change the ladder performance characteristics when water is flowing.
-Moe, I suggest to you that you mount NOTHING to the ladder. Such ideas are afterthoughts and nothing more than design or tactical "band-aids" that will alter the ladder performance characteristics. Mounting a box to carry an appliance is a band-aid for poor firefighting. Do the job properly and you won't need the band-aid.
-ANY changing of nozzles should be done safely and deliberately while the ladder is bedded. If you need the master stream it is going to be at an event that is long and drawn out, requiring lots of water and supply and therefor there is no need for such extreme expeditiousness, the urgency for speed is past. Master stream operations are not like pulling cross lays... it is more akin to haz mat; slow down, we're going to be here for a while.
Larry Lasich said:Keep the stack tip on, and build a box or clamp for the fog stream that is at the end of the ladder.
It depends on what you do. If you like the area effect or do exposure protection, stay with the fog.
Is the manufacture of the monitor or the truck that told your department they could not use stack tips?
Have you done actual reach and impact comparison test between the fog and smooth bore nozzles?
Bryan Aube said:We have a fog nozzle and have found very few times when it wasnt on a straight stream. We cant change ours out to a straight tip per the manufacturer but it would have a smooth tip if we could. Our deck guns and ground monitors are all equipped with smooth tips. I dont see much use for a fog pattern other than for large exposure protection or as a makeshift decon shower. If you are using an aerial for a master stream you are gonna want the reach and the penetration of a straight stream.
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