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Callsign: M33P2
Reg: DK57FKU
Make/Model: Scania P270 (TVAC)
Role: Water Ladder
Note: Reserve Water Ladder On Standby At Kirkby For Open Day.
Spotted on 22nd July 2023 parked on Kirkby Fire Station's forecourt was Reserve Water Ladder "Lily The Pink". Lily was on standby at Kirkby while their open day took place.
M33P2 - Ex (N7-2)
The front end of this antique fire engine in Witt Springs, Arkansas, carries its fair share of gauges and connectors.
Reliance Fire Museum
1902 Femco Water Tower
Engine: 6 cylinder REO Gold Comet gas
Water Tower: 22 ft Femco, Steck nozzle + side mounted deluge guns
This, the smallest water tower ever built, served it's entire career with the Pittsburgh, PA Fire Dept, until retired in 1972- after 73 years of service! Originally a horse drawn tower, carried by a type 31 ALF chassis starting in 1923, and placed on a 1948 REO chassis after being involved in a serious crash. PBF stands for Pittsburgh Bureau of Fire.
1902 Horsedrawn tower
1923 American Lafrance Type 31
1948 REO Gold Comet motor
A St. Pete Fire & Rescue engine spotted on a Publix parking lot. Not an emergency call - the crew were inside, catching up with their shopping.
This was the scene at 5pm on November the 5th as 45 firemen tackled a blaze at the disused Billybanks flats in Penarth.
Brunswick County - Head-on MVC, Dry Bread Road, Ebony, VA. Ebony VFD, Brunswick Volunteer Rescue Squad, Central Volunteer Rescue Squad, and the Virginia State Police responded.
Carter County Old-Time Machinery Show - September 1983 - Grayson KY.
This is the Seagraves fire engine. Notice the dual ignition system - i.e. two distributors and two spark plugs per cylinder - this was common practice with fire engines.
Tours of fire stations in Ventura County including Santa Paula, Fillmore, Oxnard, Ventura City and Ventura County.
This picture is #2 in my 100 strangers project. Find out more about the project and see pictures taken by other photographers at www.100Strangers.com.
I had just come out of Bitar's on 10th Street after having lunch, when fire engines started arriving about a block to the north. By the time I got there, they had apparently determined that there was no fire or had already put it out. The captain (with helmet) and one of his men agreed to pose - as long as Engine 3 was in the picture. In my experience, Philadelphia firefighters are a very sociable group. Maybe that's true everywhere. You also get the sense that they love their work. We were standing in the middle of the intersection of 10th and Ellsworth, so this was a quick photo before they took off, and I didn't get their names. Engine 3 is from the Moyamensing & Washington Ave. fire station.