Chicken Wings Forum

Roost Air Lounge => General Discussion => Topic started by: Fabo on August 12, 2013, 09:57:38 AM

Title: Say WHAT? Canadair tanker used to put out highway crash fire. [video]
Post by: Fabo on August 12, 2013, 09:57:38 AM
So, apparently these guys considered calling the CL-415 tanker the best way to put out a trailer rig fire.

It IS spectacular. That is for sure.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cfK51AZWBJM (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cfK51AZWBJM)
Title: Re: Say WHAT? Canadair tanker used to put out highway crash fire. [video]
Post by: Mike on August 12, 2013, 08:27:14 PM
cool!

I hope nobody was underneath that drop though!
(not sure if non-wildland people know to get out of the way....)
Title: Re: Say WHAT? Canadair tanker used to put out highway crash fire. [video]
Post by: Fabo on August 13, 2013, 07:37:27 AM
Considering there was a fire to be put out - I think they were away. At least I don't see any ground-based efforts that could lead a firefighter to be there.

I can tell you one thing though - if I saw a tanker closing in on me and I knew there was a fire nearby - I would run as hell. Uncomfortable enough having a bucket of water dropped on you, let alone several thousand of them!
Title: Re: Say WHAT? Canadair tanker used to put out highway crash fire. [video]
Post by: Mike on August 13, 2013, 05:12:08 PM
have you seen the demo where Erickson drops a water salvo (2000 gal) on a car with the Skycrane?
(I'm trying to find it)

flattens the car and pushes it 200 yards down the road!   ::unbelieveable::
Title: Re: Say WHAT? Canadair tanker used to put out highway crash fire. [video]
Post by: YawningMan on August 23, 2013, 04:00:12 PM
have you seen the demo where Erickson drops a water salvo (2000 gal) on a car with the Skycrane?
(I'm trying to find it)

flattens the car and pushes it 200 yards down the road!   ::unbelieveable::

Let's see... Water weighs about 8 lbs a gallon. Multiply that by 2,000...

16,000 lbs of water. Of course, you could just take the 2,000 gallons and transfer it directly to the weight of water, coming up with 8 tons of water. 2,000 lbs is a ton, after all.
Real Time Web Analytics