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Fire Hydrants And Dry Standpipes
Colloquially called called fire plugs, the are used by fire departments to access water for fire supression.
2024 Fire Hydrants 2015 Fire Hydrants 2008 Fire Hydrants 2007 Fire Hydrants 2006 Fire Hydrants 1993 Fire Hydrants 1992 Fire Hydrants 1991 Fire Hydrants
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2024 Fire Hydrants, And Dry Standpipes, San Francisco, California

Municipal services, such as street sweepers and tank trucks, may also be allowed to use hydrants to fill their water tanks. Often sewer maintenance trucks need water to flush out sewerage lines, and fill their tanks on site from a hydrant.[from wikipedia]

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2015 Fire Hydrants, And Dry Standpipes

Municipal services, such as street sweepers and tank trucks, may also be allowed to use hydrants to fill their water tanks. Often sewer maintenance trucks need water to flush out sewerage lines, and fill their tanks on site from a hydrant.[from wikipedia]

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2008 Fire Hydrants, And Dry Standpipes

To prevent casual use or misuse, the hydrant requires special tools to be opened, usually a large wrench with a pentagonal socket.[from wikipedia]

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2007 Fire Hydrants, And Dry Standpipes

In 1896, during a terrible heatwave in New York City, the Chief of Police, Theodore Roosevelt, ordered the opening of the fire hydrants to provide relief to the population.[from wikipedia]

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2006 Fire Hydrants, And Dry Standpipes

When operating a hydrant, a firefighter typically wears appropriate personal protective equipment, such as gloves and a helmet with face shield worn.[from wikipedia]

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1993 Fire Hydrants, And Dry Standpipes

Most fire hydrant valves are not designed to throttle the water flow; they are designed to be operated full-on or full-off. The valving arrangement of most dry-barrel hydrants is for the drain valve to be open at anything other than full operation.[from wikipedia]

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1992 Fire Hydrants, And Dry Standpipes

The user attaches a hose to the fire hydrant, then opens a valve on the hydrant to provide a powerful flow of water, on the order of 350 kPa (50 pounds per square inch gauge (psig); this pressure varies according to region and depends on various factors including the size and location of the attached water main).[from wikipedia]

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1991 Fire Hydrants, And Dry Standpipes

Before piped mains supplies, water for firefighting had to be kept in buckets and cauldrons ready for use by 'bucket-brigades' or brought with a horse-drawn fire-pump.[from wikipedia]


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