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Fire engine drafting
Fire engine drafting

The term drafting water refers to the use of suction to move a liquid such as water from a vessel or body of water below the intake of a suction pump. Suction is the flow of a fluid into a partial Vacuum, or region of low pressure For information on Wikipedia project-related discussions see WikipediaVillage pump. A rural fire department or farmer might draft water from a pond as the first step in moving the water elsewhere. See also the Firefighter article and its respective sections regarding VFDs in other countries A suction pump creates a partial vacuum (a "draft") and the atmospheric pressure on the water's surface forces the water into the pump, usually via a rigid pipe (sometimes called a "dry hydrant") or a semi-rigid "suction hose". A fire hydrant (also known colloquially as a fire plug in the United States or as a johnny pump in New York City, because the firemen of the

Standard atmospheric pressure is 101 kPa (14. 7 lbf/in²) and that can only raise water to a theoretical maximum of 10. 3 metres (33. 9 ft). Depending on application, fire department pumps lift water 6 to 10 metres (20 to 30 ft).

To reduce drafting friction and obtain a larger flow or higher lift, a larger cross-section of suction hose is employed. For example, using a 5 inch (127 mm) hose, a pump that could lift 500 US gallons per minute (30 L/s) up 23 feet (7 m) would only be able to lift the same amount of water 12. 5 feet (4 m) through a 3. 5 inch (76 mm) hose. Fire engines are often seen carrying two or three 10 foot (3 m) lengths of suction hose, but the longer the lift, the lower the flow, for a fixed diameter suction hose and a given pump. Multiple relays could be used if the need arises, with a suction pump drafting up to 10 metres (30 ft), and discharging at great distances.

It is also possible to use a gravity siphon to draft water for a small lift, and this technique is often used in forest fire suppression, where portable reservoirs of 1,000 to 3,000 US gallons (5 to 10 m³) are filled with water and small hoses are used downhill of the tanks. A siphon (also spelled syphon) is a continuous tube that allows liquid to drain from a reservoir through an intermediate point that is higher than the reservoir the flow being A wildfire, also known as a wildland fire, forest fire, brush fire, vegetation fire, grass fire, Peat fire, A reservoir is most broadly a place or hollow vessel where Fluid is kept in Reserve, for later use The nozzle pressure is proportional to its distance below the reservoir surface. Forty-three percent of the distance, in feet, is approximately the number of pounds per square inch pressure (e. g. , 100 feet lower: 43 psi). The tank may itself be gravity-fed through hoses from a nearby water source, or by pumps or helicopters delivering water from further away.

See also


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