Tanker trucks, ambulance, Cobra
The Kvasiny firefighters have two tankers, known as CAS20 and CAS40 (the numbers indicate the pump capacity). The smaller one is the first-choice tanker which always goes out. The larger one is only used when more water is needed for a serious fire, because it can carry eight and a half thousand litres of water. The unit also has a platform with a ladder that can reach a height of 42 metres. The container carrier, a piece of equipment the fire protection unit bought three years ago, is ready for any problem with electric vehicles. The truck carries a floodable container; a car with a high-voltage system fault is loaded into the container by means of a winch or loading arm. The container is then flooded with water, cooling the battery and preventing air from reaching the battery.
The company fire chief takes charge of any operation on Škoda’s premises
Smaller pieces of kit include a Volkswagen Transporter rapid response vehicle, which carries standard accident response equipment like hydraulic shears, spreaders and the like. There is also a Volkswagen Crafter ambulance, which the fire crew use to provide pre-medical first aid, both on the plant’s premises and elsewhere, and to transport employees to and from medical facilities. The last vehicle in the fleet is a minibus used to transport firefighters for training, as a replacement vehicle for the ambulance and also as a back-up vehicle for treating injured employees in the event of a major emergency.
Thermal imaging cameras are another essential piece of equipment. “They are the firefighter’s second eyes, and we couldn’t manage without them today. Once an area is filled with smoke and you can’t make anything out, the thermal camera shows you the layout of the space and where the fire is,” Thér explains.
The full line-up of fire-fighting equipment at Kvasiny
One very interesting and special feature of the two fire engines is the CCS Cobra extinguishing system, which operates at a pressure of around 300 bar. Abrasives can be mixed into the water, which creates enough power to pierce a hole in concrete or cut through a rail, so it can penetrate through building structures to reach enclosed spaces that are on fire. The Cobra tool can then deliver sixty litres of water per minute through a hole about three millimetres in diameter. It works with a special nozzle that produces water droplets several times smaller than found in conventional jets. Because of their small size, these droplets take away a lot of heat and reduce the temperature considerably in a short time.
“Just as all Škoda employees undergo training, it is important for us to practise the procedures in real conditions. We train with the Cobra system in the former military training zone in Ralsko, where we are borrowing an old guard house from the state fire service, and inside that we burn wood or pallets. The fire can raise the temperature to six hundred to seven hundred degrees. We get to work on it with the Cobra and then the guys go inside to finish extinguishing the fire. Within two minutes, we bring the temperature down to about 130 to 170 degrees, which makes it much more comfortable for firefighters to enter the space,” Thér says.
Kvasiny fire fighters have two tanker trucks: CAS20 and CAS40.