This channel primarily serves as the Fort Worth Fire Department's library of training videos. The intent is to create a place where all FWFD members and any other firefighter can find new and relevant training material related to their profession.
This fried my brain. For each floor, raise pressure by 5 psi. That's about 10 feet of head per floor. But I'm in a metric country. around 3m per floor, and about 33kPa per floor. I'm originally from the US and was raised on US units, but quickly switched to metric. Now, I have trouble code switching, especially for new things learned after I moved to a metric country. It's a shame the US is so reluctant to join the rest of the world to use the metric system.
As someone who has experienced this from a laced lsd trip, it’s incredibly scary. You basically lose your mind and you don’t know where you are or who your around. You’re in a different world in your head. I did some things I’ll never forgive myself for and I don’t remember doing it.
I ended up smashing my mates whole living room up i had uncontrolable rage it was un bare able, i was just making animalistic grunts when i wanted to comunicate with the police to try and tell them i couldnt stop myself but didnt want to hurt them. What do you think it was laced with? As me and 2 friends had 1 fruit pastel sweet with liquid acid dripped on each all in 1 bag, but they disnt go insane like me…
Be careful placing the elevator in “Hold”. That prevents the elevator from returning to the ground floor where incoming units will be waiting to make their accent. It will essentially be locked out and useless. Identify a means of egress and then place the elevator back in phase I so units behind you can get to the resource floor.
This is a hidden gem. Almost no discussion, but this has some genuinely quality info. I've got different preferences once you start talking about drags and window removal, but up to that point, it's a well articulated description of the basics that a lot of departments take for granted. Well done.
It’s good to see that FWFD is once again partnering with their Medical Director, and coordinating CE topics related to their protocols and the ambulance service they utilize. Solid work!
Cause of death: excited delirium after the cop kneeled on the man’s neck who. Was screaming “I can’t breathe.” I’m not saying he choked him out, but grinding his face against the concrete didn’t help. Even after paramedics turn up they drop his head onto the tar. They all treated it like a game of American football until the guy was already dead. Makes you sick.
Those Knox fdc caps are such a grift. They market them so well as "high security" and have got them written into so many city codes, including Fort Worth, that they can charge $600 (!!!) a pair. The wrenches are as easy to get as elevator keys lmao, I have one.
Hey guys, this is an excellent video thank so much for putting this out there; I hope to see many more videos like this. I know we all have many different ways to achieve the same result. I am glad to see what other people are doing around the country. Keep up the good work guys.
Yes, this is a hard lesson for those folks on scene. It's easy to arm-chair quarterback this first example and point out all that went wrong and what could be done better. Police/EMS/Fire work is a hard job and its up to us in that industry to be the best we can and to always be learning. We can all learn a lot from the incidents depicted in this lesson so that the mistakes made are not repeated.
I do not agree with this "vertical crush" shit. You should never put the tool in a position that if the tool pops lose it will land on your patient. Also if you can't make a purchase point with a halligan tool in under 10 seconds. You might want to reconsider your career choices.
I’m wondering why you need 3 engines to supply. Can’t they just Hooke the hydrant straight to truck 2 instead?? And then used truck 3 to feed another stand pipe if there is 2 or just to run a line if that makes sense for the layout? Or is there a reason you want to do it this way? Besides being able to and less stress on equipment type stuff?
In FWFD we use 1st E as Fire Attack, 2nd E ties to standpipe to feed Fire Attack, 3rd E ties to water supply and feeds 2nd E. Running two engines in a series allows for higher pressure pumping to elevations above 20th floor.
Excited delirium is not recognized by the World Health Organization, the American Psychiatric Association, the American Medical Association, and not listed as a medical condition in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, or International Classification of Diseases.
Nice beautiful clean water and a perfect sunny day is a unicor in the sky the difference between the real scenario. Talk about mood, water no visibility, 35 degrees tempetura no oxygen enough to go down and brake a window let alone cut a belt. Nice try FWPD
Reminds me of capture death which can happen in wild animals, they get such a high adrenaline rush from being captured by humans that they can just die.
This first clip is literally just a guy being cracked out and paranoid, the cop deciding for some fucking reason to choke him without even properly trying to calm him down or get his hands behind his back properly, and then the police all brutalising some poor cracked out guy to the point he dies from the extreme stress on his heart and / or the fucking knees on his neck. Horrific, American Police are terribly trained.
Wow that cop did a great job at the end treating it like a medical issue and not someone that needs to be put in the back of a car. Fortunately he wasn't getting violent but damn that must be scary to deal with someone who is that out of it