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2002 |
Fire
district has brand new engine
Sisters firefighters now have
a state-of-the-art weapon to take on structural fires in the growing Sisters
community.
Last week, Fire Chief Don
Rowe, Assistant Chief Ken Enoch and volunteer firefighter Jeff Liming
rolled into town with the Sisters-Camp Sherman Rural Fire Protection District's
brand new Pierce fire engine.
The three firefighters took
the $350,000 fire engine off the assembly line in Wisconsin, where the
engine had been under design and construction since November of last year.
"It was built to fit our needs,"
said Enoch. "We designed what we needed out of the apparatus."
The design was prompted by
growth in the Sisters area, particularly in the industrial park, where
larger buildings are springing up.
The engine features a 1,250
gallons-per-minute pump and a 1,000-gallon tank. The engine can spew a
high volume of both water and foam on a fire.
Six firefighters can ride
in the cab.
The manpower-carrying capacity
is critical, because safety regulations now forbid firefighters from riding
on the outside of a fire rig. In the new engine, the firefighters can
don their breathing apparatus while underway, secured in their seats.
The engine also carries a
light mast that can illuminate a 360-degree emergency scene and carries
automatic drop-down chains for winter driving safety.
The powerful rig with a 450-horsepower
Cummins engine and Allison transmission is a pleasure to drive.
"It handles fantastic," Enoch
said. "Actually, it has a sharper turning radius than our other vehicle
this size."
The fire department regards
the new structural engine as an investment in Sisters' future.
"This truck will be around
here for 30 years," Enoch said.
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