• Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!

  • Microsoft MSN, Live, Hotmail, Outlook email users may not be receiving emails. We are working to resolve this issue. Please add support@steelsoldiers.com to your trusted contacts.

 

Less tippy brush fire truck

mcmullag

Member
919
13
18
Location
Colorado Springs, CO region
I saw this truck in the staging area of a parade in Canon City, CO I was doing May 5th. Talked to the driver and said it does really well offroad, holds 1,000 gallons of water. Thought maybe it would help to broadcast this idea around the country. If I understand it correctly, they fabricate this in Ft. Collins, CO. Some of the brush fire trucks I see pictured in threads on here look very tippy to take offroad for fires.

Fire Shop & Equipment - Colorado State Forest Service - Colorado State University
 

Attachments

1,540
62
0
Location
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Looks good but its over loaded for its rated 5,000 pound offroad use, and probably close to or over its limit of 10,000 pounds for on road use. 1000 gallons of water is 8350 pounds (4 tons). Plus all the equipment and the weight of the tank its self. Id put that same setup on the back of a 5ton and call it a day.
 

preyn2

New member
50
0
0
Location
Burnet, TX
I've thought about a similar idea.

Looks good but its over loaded for its rated 5,000 pound offroad use, and probably close to or over its limit of 10,000 pounds for on road use.
My thought is that when you remove the bed, you gain that amount of carrying capacity, although I don't know what a deuce bed weighs.

Neat idea, if the weight is within the chassis restictions.
 

Warthog

Moderator
Super Moderator
Steel Soldiers Supporter
13,775
227
63
Location
OKC, OK
I noticed the squared turn singal guards that some one asked about the other day.

I wonder what the tank is made of? Steel or aluminum.

With the lowering of the CG of the tank, It is much better than a couple of 600 gal pods. Still may be over weight.
 

Csm Davis

Well-known member
4,151
376
83
Location
Hattiesburg, Mississippi
Guys even the military made over weight deuces you don't know if they addressed that or not, I have one that had like twenty thousand put on it permanently. With the engineering that went into that tank that could have been addressed also.
 

pwrwagonfire

New member
652
5
0
Location
Central Massachusetts
Gentlemen, their is a mechanic here on SS from the Colorado Forest Service who is in charge of building these things...hopefully he can chime in here and answer your questions!

I worked with one of these trucks about 6 years ago when in Colorado for a couple wildfire classes. If I remember correctly, the tank was aluminum.

EDIT: Read the link you posted, appears I was wrong the tanks are steel and hot dipped. The link says each tank they CFS shop makes is 880 gallons
 
Last edited:
1,540
62
0
Location
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
I forgot to take into the account of the bed missing so that deducts 2000 pounds/1 ton so 880 gallons of water weigh 3.674 tons minus 1 ton equals 2.674 tons PLUS the weight of all the equipment on top on the tank. That sounds much more offroadable. [thumbzup]
 

73m819

Rock = older than dirt , GA. MAFIA , Dirty
Steel Soldiers Supporter
In Memorial
12,196
314
0
Location
gainesville, ga.
I forgot to take into the account of the bed missing so that deducts 2000 pounds/1 ton so 880 gallons of water weigh 3.674 tons minus 1 ton equals 2.674 tons PLUS the weight of all the equipment on top on the tank. That sounds much more offroadable. [thumbzup]
Bet the empty STEEL tank weighs as much as a deuce bed
 
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website like our supporting vendors. Their ads help keep Steel Soldiers going. Please consider disabling your ad blockers for the site. Thanks!

I've Disabled AdBlock
No Thanks