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The In-Line Gauge in Standpipe Operations

BY RUSS CHAPMAN

Your engine company receives a report of fire in a mid-rise elderly housing complex during morning coffee at the beginning of a shift. You know from past history that this complex has had fires as well as “smells and bells.”

On arrival, you see the familiar seven-story Type I standpipe-equipped apartment complex and note heavy smoke coming from a window on the A side of the sixth floor. You call in a second alarm and order your crew to grab their hose bundles as you grab the standpipe bag. As you enter the building, your pump operator hooks up to the fire department connection. An occupant reports the fire is in apartment 6-G, which you report to all incoming companies and designate the B stairwell as the attack stairwell.

Your company proceeds up to the fifth floor, where you order your crew to connect three lengths of hose and the nozzle as you memorize the floor layout. You order the second-arriving engine company to come to your position and assist with getting the first hoseline into operation. After instructing one of your crew members to connect up to the standpipe outlet, you lead the remainder of the two companies up to the fire floor.

On the fire floor, the hallway has a light smoke condition, so you know the apartment door is controlled. Your companies make their way to the apartment door, and you call for water. Initially, you get great pressure, and you bleed the air from the hoseline. As you proceed into the fire apartment, you order your nozzle firefighter to open up. Suddenly, the line goes limp, there is no pressure, and the stream is poor. You order the crews to back out the hoseline, and control the door.

The firefighter standing by the valve radios you that the valve is fully open. Your pump operator radios you, reporting that he has good water and is pumping at the standard operating procedure (SOP) pressure of 150 pounds per square inch (psi). However, you are still having problems with your stream. Again you radio your pump operator; he says he is still pumping at 150 psi. You instruct him to increase the pressure because you are having water problems. After what seems like an eternity, you call back to ask if he increased his pressure; he assures you he is up to 200 psi.

While you confer with the officer of the other engine company, the ladder company radios that it found an open standpipe outlet in the basement that appears to have been vandalized and that members managed to close it.

You regroup your efforts, but what was originally a room-and-contents fire has now extended to the whole apartment. Your company finally regains pressure and is able to make good progress and knock down the fire.

PRESSURE MONITORING

The preceding incident can happen in any town. Standpipes are not exclusive to high-rise structures. Most standpipe operations that go wrong are directly attributed to water issues. A main tool commonly ignored in standpipe operations is the in-line gauge. A connection that is placed on the standpipe outlet, the in-line gauge has a 2½-inch swivel coupling at one end, a 2½-inch male connection on the other, and an armored pressure gauge in the center (photos 1, 2). The gauge monitors the pressures of the hoselines attacking the fire and is monitored by a firefighter, who should be permanently assigned to the outlet if staffing allows. This firefighter is designated the standpipe valve or control firefighter.


(1) Photos by author.
Click here to enlarge image

 


(2)
Click here to enlarge image

Using the in-line gauge has numerous advantages.


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