It depends upon whether you mean the standard that requires or allows a fire hose cabinet to be present (and their locations), or the requirements for installations, or for the manufacture of a fire hose cabinet, or the requirements for occupant training if there are fire hose cabinets.
Regarding fire hose cabinet placement and training: that would be covered by the locally adopted fire code, such as NFPA 1 and NFPA 101® LIfe Safety Code®, under the "fire protection systems" required for a particular facility.
The requirements for the mechanism, configuration and installation would be covered in the cross-referenced NFPA 14, "Standard for the Installation of Standpipe and Hose Systems" and maintenance would be covered in NFPA 25, "Standard for the Inspection, Testing, and Maintenance of Water-Based Fire Protection Systems."
A place where you keep the fire hose?...
NFPA 1901, Standard for Automotive Fire Apparatus - Requires pumpers to carry: * 15 feet of large soft sleeve hose or 20 feet of hard suction hose * 1200 feet of 2 ½ inch or larger supply hose * 400 feet of 1 ½ , 1 ¾, or 2 inch attack hose
in America the standard length of a fire hose is 50 feet Hose used if wildland fire suppression comes in 100 foot sections
150 ft
A standard fire hose is 50 feet long. A hose this length with a 2-inch radius grants about 4.36 cubic feet. This volume holds 32 gallons of water.
It is approx 45.7 metres.
Yes, valves that are not closed will cause a major problem when the standpipe is tested annually, i.e., flooding or even an explosive hose deployment inside a cabinet.
it is a hose
it is a hose
Where was the first fire hose created?
because the hose is fire-retardant. I would see it as kind of pointless to have a fire-hose that catches on fire. it just... defeats the purpose
Fire-fighter's hoses is the plural of fire-fighter's hose