atgreene said:
Wow, great thread.
1. Pumps, go for pressure over volume when dealing with nozzles and sprinklers.
2. O2 tank, better off getting a SCUBA tank with compressed air or use a compressor tank. Pure O2 under a cloth tarp would cause one heck of a fire when ignited. Be very careful.
3. Tanks, would a fold-a-tank work for what you need? Fill it during fire season or when needed?
4. Sprinklers are great, but they may cause the barricade or foam to be washed off. You may want to go with one or the other.
5. Hose fittings. Unless there is something different from here, FD's and Forest service usually use Iron pipe for forestry (1-1/2") and National standard for larger hose. Iron pipe is a much finer thread than National, I'd suggest checking with them and make all yours the same as theirs.
Good luck!
atgreene,
Thank you for your comments.
1. Good to know.
2. Yeah, I thought of that about the 02 after I posted. I have a couple scuba friends that only dive once or twice a year. Maybe one would let me store one of their tanks here.
3. I like the folding tanks but they are just as spendy (or more) as a permanent tank. I found one on ebay last week. At $650 for 3000 gal still too much for me right now.
4. I have metal roof and gutters on the house. I'll not Barricade the roof; that'd be a waste if I ran the roof sprinklers. But the eaves and walls should hold the barricade and the roof sprinklers shoot beyond the house perimeter to dampen the surrounds. At the shop I have metal roof but no gutter. Here I expect running the roof sprinklers will wash off the bottom foot or so barricade from the walls. I have a concrete apron in front and a gravel road abutting one side. I'll put a 3'-4' wide gravel path at the back and other side, keep it cleared of pine needles and oak leaves, and I think this will have to do for low wall protection. The low walls will be wet from the roof edge splash and the upper walls and eaves protected with the Barricade.
5. I sure thought USFS and local FD used NH threads even on 1 1/2" hose. I'll need to check, that's what I have. If they have IP I'll need to get a couple of adapters and wire them onto the hydrants. Good heads-up, Thanks.
RobertN,
I agree. Fire truck access is right at the top of the list of preparedness. A fire truck could bump the full length of three sides of my four buildings. I have a circle drive with the house in the center and the out buildings on the outside radius and two entry gates to the property that connect to the circle drive. There are at least two places turn around.
If nothing else I would think the top 3 priorities for fire preparedness would be:
Evacuation/Egress Plan
Defensible Space
Fire Truck Access
I put defensible space before truck access because there is no reason a homeowner can't improve this where as a major driveway project may be out of reach for some, at least immediately.