Varies by type of truck, e.g., pumper, tender, tanker, hood-and-ladder, brush truck, etc.
That depends on the size and materials of the fire truck. Some firetrucks hold as much as 3000 gallons of water and can weigh 50,000 pounds or more.
Fire hose reels are much stronger than typical home-based hose reels people use to water their gardens and lawns. Typical heavy duty fire hose reels weigh anywhere from 25 to 35 pounds. In kilograms, the weight of typical reels are 11-15 kg.
Depends on the size and type. Some don't carry any at all, and must be fed from a hydrant or water tanker truck.
Need to know engine size and year.
tabletop truck weight depends on size of truck
150mm dia
fuel tank capacity depends only on what make and size the truck is. the trucks only have fire and emergency equipment added to a truck that is bought from the manufacturer
The volume that a dump truck can hold depends on the size of the truck. You could say that there is no 'typical' dump truck. The horsepower, the axle weight, and the size of the box are a few of the features that determine how much the truck can hold and haul.
weight of a fire truck depends on the size and cinfiguration of the truck brushpumpers(flat bed 4x4) will obviously not weigh same as a tanker we have a tanker/ engine that can pump 400 gallons a minute, and carries 3000 gallons of water this truck loaded weighs about 56000 pounds we have an engine that carries 1200 gallons of water and rescue equipment this truck only weighs about 28000 pounds a brushpumper with 300 gallons would weigh about 8000 pounds a rescue squad depends on size of truck and equipment carried on it a ladder truck is a different weight again hope this helps a little there are all types and sizes of fire trucks
unfortunately, you have not given enough information for someone to answer the question. What is the size of the hose, how many gallons are you pumping through it?
This depends on the weight of the truck and the type of truck, the size and weight of the cow, etc.
Friction loss is one of the things we use that's critical when pumping a fire truck with crosslays/hose off the truck. The most common formula runs off 100ft sections in the following size/FL format: 1.75 hose (crosslay/jump line): ~13.5 PSI loss per 100' section 2.5" hose (blitz line): ~18 PSI loss per 100' section 5" hose: .08 PSI loss per 100' section All rates are based on your typical flow rate in GPM's...however the more gallonage the more friction loss. There is an accepted standard for GPM and friction loss: 1.5" hose 100GPM at 30PSI per 100' 1.75" hose 150 GPM at 32 PSI per 100'