A place where you keep the fire hose?...
150 ft
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."
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
in America the standard length of a fire hose is 50 feet Hose used if wildland fire suppression comes in 100 foot sections
No- the president rules over his cabinet and he can fire them if he wishes.
When a liquid fire extinguisher has a hose, the stream of liquid coming from the hose is called the "hose stream" and can be directed at the base of the flames.
"Fire hose" is typically written as two words.