wroughtn_harv
Super Member
Mark,
That old Dodge looks like something I would build, too much is just enough.
Check out the <A target="_blank" HREF=http://photos.yahoo.com/bc/wroughtnharv/lst?.dir=/Truck+stuff+trailer+stuff&.src=ph&.order=&.view=t&.done=http%3a//photos.yahoo.com/bc/wroughtnharv/lst%3f%26.dir=/%26.src=ph%26.view=t>brush fire truck guards and racks</A> I built for a local fire department.
What upsets me is the national association of heads up their butts say that everyone in a fire truck has to be in an approved cab and belted in if the vehicle is moving.
That sounds good.
But think about it. You're dealing with folks who run into burning buildings as everyone else is running out. Do you think for a minute they're gonna sit in the cab while fighting a grass fire? Hell no, they're gonna sit on the tank or lean against the cab with a high pressure hose filling both hands while another heroic personality drives through and over gawd alone know what.
And when they do that they do so at their own risk. No one wants to step up to the plate and accept these men and women are going to do whatever has to be done even at extreme personal risk of life and limb.
Against all conventional wisdom when our fire department got these two grass fire rigs I volunteered to make them these racks for the beds and install their winches.
If you look close you can see where two men can safely stand back there with safety harnesses on fighting the grass fire. They won't get bounced out. There's a foot rail so they won't get slid out. And the rail is of the height that they can lean against it to brace themselves. The only thing I'd add at this date would be roll over protection.
The guys love them.
I looked into maybe marketing them but there's this thing called liability. No one would cover that end. So the only way they get made is when guys like myself figure that the risk of personal fortune to a legal eagle is nothing compared to the risk of life and limb of these heroes. Folks are copying these out in the rural areas where grass fires are a serious threat and the heroes are volunteers.
BTW that front bumper on that Dodge dually I originally made with an over the hood assembly kinda like those that Stinger makes for Hummers. It looked wild. Bud thought it made his strut truck look too wild. He just didn't understand that too much is just enough.
That old Dodge looks like something I would build, too much is just enough.
Check out the <A target="_blank" HREF=http://photos.yahoo.com/bc/wroughtnharv/lst?.dir=/Truck+stuff+trailer+stuff&.src=ph&.order=&.view=t&.done=http%3a//photos.yahoo.com/bc/wroughtnharv/lst%3f%26.dir=/%26.src=ph%26.view=t>brush fire truck guards and racks</A> I built for a local fire department.
What upsets me is the national association of heads up their butts say that everyone in a fire truck has to be in an approved cab and belted in if the vehicle is moving.
That sounds good.
But think about it. You're dealing with folks who run into burning buildings as everyone else is running out. Do you think for a minute they're gonna sit in the cab while fighting a grass fire? Hell no, they're gonna sit on the tank or lean against the cab with a high pressure hose filling both hands while another heroic personality drives through and over gawd alone know what.
And when they do that they do so at their own risk. No one wants to step up to the plate and accept these men and women are going to do whatever has to be done even at extreme personal risk of life and limb.
Against all conventional wisdom when our fire department got these two grass fire rigs I volunteered to make them these racks for the beds and install their winches.
If you look close you can see where two men can safely stand back there with safety harnesses on fighting the grass fire. They won't get bounced out. There's a foot rail so they won't get slid out. And the rail is of the height that they can lean against it to brace themselves. The only thing I'd add at this date would be roll over protection.
The guys love them.
I looked into maybe marketing them but there's this thing called liability. No one would cover that end. So the only way they get made is when guys like myself figure that the risk of personal fortune to a legal eagle is nothing compared to the risk of life and limb of these heroes. Folks are copying these out in the rural areas where grass fires are a serious threat and the heroes are volunteers.
BTW that front bumper on that Dodge dually I originally made with an over the hood assembly kinda like those that Stinger makes for Hummers. It looked wild. Bud thought it made his strut truck look too wild. He just didn't understand that too much is just enough.