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Monsoon
Fire Sprinklers Testimonials
Hear from some of the people that have
used them!
Feedback from a true fire incident...
On July 18th, 2004 I was Engine Boss on Prescott
Patrol 71, a Type 6 wildland engine as a part of a Strike
Team. We were working on the Foothill Fire in Santa Clarita
California. On that afternoon we were sent into the Fairoaks
Subdivision for structure protection as the fire was making
rapid progress though the brush and sizeable runs up canyons
and drainages.
The Fairoaks subdivision lay adjacent to a heavily
fueled canyon. The Strike Team was deployed to the structures
along the canyon’s edge to begin triage. Engines placed
themselves every four or five houses, with Patrol 71 located
at a house sitting on a drainage that led down into the canyon.
This seemed a likely breach point into the community, as the
fire would make its run up that drainage.
The time available for evaluation and implementation
before the flame front hit was only ten to fifteen minutes.
Based on several prior days of extreme fire behavior, it seemed
likely that we would have to pull out at some point. Establishing
a protection system we could leave behind seemed a wise option.
A swimming pool located in the backyard was used as a water
source with a Mini-Striker pumping to a series of Monsoon
sprinklers.
The time frames involved allowed us to assemble
four sprinklers, but only establish water to two of them before
the fire made its run to our position. Those two sprinklers
were directly behind our first structure. Our intent had been
to establish the next two sprinklers at the house next door.
The fire’s run up the canyon and our drainage forced
us to fall back to a position between the pool and the house,
where the engineer had placed a 1.75” hoseline.
The whole flame front event lasted less than
five minutes. Flames lengths were 20-30 foot. Behind the first
home, the flames fell 10-20 foot short of contacting the home
itself. The adjacent home without sprinklers had direct flame
impingement that we were only able to mitigate using the 1.75”
line. My firefighter and I attributed the decreased fire behavior
at the first home to the presence of the two Monsoon sprinklers.
With just a few minutes of lead-time, the sprinklers were
able to make a huge difference.
In eleven years of wildland firefighting, this
was the most intense flame front I have found myself in front
of. Witnessing the impact of the Monsoon sprinklers made me
a believer in the effectiveness of sprinkler systems and the
use of structure protection trailers. Used in conjunction
with a portable pump and a static water supply, I finally
believe that sprinklers can increase the likelihood of a structure
surviving a flame front in the event that the engine company
has to withdraw from the area.
E. Conrad Jackson
Firefighter, Engine Boss, Prescott Fire Department
The monsoon structure protection sprinklers
are durable, easy to use, and very effective. The two structure
protection kits (10 sprinklers) that we carry on our type
3 engine have proven to be a very useful and effective tool
for saving structures from wildfire."
Ted H., Engine Captain - Blacktimber Wildland
Services
Guys,
I just want to let you know how impressed I
am with these sprinklers. Seeing is believing! I knew they
were a stong unit before I bought them, but now that I have
them I'm really impressed. Anyway, I now have them set up
around my cabin and know that these are going to be key to
saving my place in the event of a wildfire (or should I say
when we get a fire). They were a piece of cake to
set up too. When I tested my system, not only did I I get
complete coverage on my property, I also watered my neighbors'
houses! Thanks for everything.
Matt F., Resident - Groom Creek, AZ
Posted on a message board regarding a fire project in Alberta...
I just came across your sprinkler project and
thought that I'd add information on a product from the US
that I have used with success. Advanced Fire Technologies
(www.advancedfiretechnologies.com) has a line of specialized
sprinklers for structure protection. They are relatively expensive,
but they work. One of their models is set up on "spider
legs" so you can either place it on the ground or on
an up to 12 pitch roof. The sprinklers are built using 46cm
nipples that you can add to to get the height you need dependent
on fuel height (I've used them built up to 2 meters). My preference
is to put one on the roof and one at each corner on the ground
to get maximum coverage.
Bob M., BLM
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