PRODUCT DESIGN The Firefighter Air Replenishment System Also known as FARS DESIGN 1 © 2011 Ronny J....
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Transcript of PRODUCT DESIGN The Firefighter Air Replenishment System Also known as FARS DESIGN 1 © 2011 Ronny J....
PRODUCT DESIGN
The Firefighter Air Replenishment System
Also known asFARS
DESIGN
1© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
PRODUCT DESIGN
Basic Components– Fire Department Air Connection Panel – Interconnected Tubing – Air-Fill Panels (or Stations) – Air Monitoring System– Air Storage System
DESIGN
2© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
PRODUCT DESIGN
Fire Department Air Connection Panel
on the Building Exterior
DESIGN
3© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
EMAC
PRODUCT DESIGN
Fire Department Air Connection Panel with
Door Open
DESIGN
4© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
PRODUCT DESIGN
Mobile Air Unit (MAU) Vehicle
DESIGN
5© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
PRODUCT DESIGN DESIGN
6© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
PRODUCT DESIGN
Interconnected tubing distributes breathing air to all building-based fill panels and fill stations
DESIGN
7© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
PRODUCT DESIGN DESIGN
8© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
Fire Protection &
Mechanical Damage
Air Fill
PRODUCT DESIGN
Plan View – Fill station location
DESIGN
9© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
PRODUCT DESIGN
Emergency Rapid Fill Panel
• Optional for AHJs that practice refilling with bottles still on a firefighters back
• This practice is not allowed in all systems
• Based on local AHJ preference
DESIGN
10© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
PRODUCT DESIGN
This fill station is approximately 27 inches wide by 13 inches high.
Emergency Fill Stations should be capable of replenishing a minimum of two (2) empty 45 cubic foot, 4,500 PSI breathing air cylinders within two (2) minutes or less.
DESIGN
11© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
PRODUCT DESIGN
Fill Station– With rupture-proof
containment
– Located in the interior of the structure
• Every 3 to 5 levels above and below grade.
DESIGN
12© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
PRODUCT DESIGN
The Rupture Containment Fill Stations are capable of replenishing a minimum of two (2) empty 45 cubic foot, 4,500 PSI breathing air cylinders within two (2) minutes or less
DESIGN
13© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
PRODUCT DESIGN
Air Monitoring System
DESIGN
14© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
PRODUCT DESIGN
Air Monitoring System
DESIGN
15© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
Quality control measurements 1. carbon monoxide, 2. moisture, 3. oxygen 4. and pressure. Air analyzers sample the
system
PRODUCT DESIGN
Air Storage System
DESIGN
16© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
PRODUCT DESIGN DESIGN
17© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
Compressor
PRODUCT DESIGN
Security
DESIGN
18© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
PRODUCT DESIGN DESIGN
19© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
Fail-Safe Features
PRODUCT DESIGN
© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman 20
DESIGN
On the Exterior
RAPID FILL
Some fire agencies want to be able to fill their bottles quickly - they choose the Emergency Rapid Fill System
FIREFIGHTER AIR SYSTEM (FFAS)RAPID FILL SYSTEM
DESIGN
21© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
STANDARD METHOD
NFPA and OSHA Compliant
FIREFIGHTER AIR SYSTEM (FFAS)RUPTURE CONTAINMENT SYSTEM
DESIGN
22© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
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ISOLATION VALVES
System Isolation Valve
© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
DESIGN
TACTICS & STRATEGY
FARS Tactical Advantage• Top-off fire crews prior to
entering the fire floor• Necessary if firefighters
wear SCBAs consuming air as they climb to fire floor through contaminated atmosphere
• Eliminates need to change out bottles or wait for cylinders
© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman 24
SUPPORT
25
TACTICS & STRATEGY
FARS Awareness in the Community
• Important to develop a comprehensive Standard Operating Procedure for FARS
• Assures both local and mutual aid resources are aware of system uses to support fire floor operations
© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
SUPPORT
26
TACTICS & STRATEGY
Importance of Pre-Fire Planning in the Community
• Important to develop a Preplans for the us of FARS
• Effective use of system during actual operations
© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
SUPPORT
OPERATIONAL SUPPORT
Firefighter Air Systems – Save lives– Save time– Save money
SUPPORT
27© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
MANUFACTURER SUPPORT
Original research and development
Product tested to highest safety standards
Supports building safety standards
SUPPORT
28© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
MANUFACTURER SUPPORT
More than 300 Firefighter Air Systems have been installed in
– Arizona– California– Colorado– Florida– Nevada– Oregon
SUPPORT
29© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
ADOPTION OF THE TECHNOLOGY
ADOPT
ADAPT
INNOVATE
© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman 30
THANKS TO OUR SPONSOR
Rescue Air Systems, Inc.751 Laurel Street, Suite 416
San Carlos, CA 94070Tel: 650.654.6000
www.rescueair.com
31© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman
The development of this training program is dedicated to the memory of Chief Don Anthony of
the Los Angeles Fire Department
SUMMARY
Firefighter air replenishment systems are an example of the Risk Assessment Model providing a sense of direction to risk mitigation
32© 2011 Ronny J. Coleman