OBJECTIVES
This advance firefighting training will transform your participants to formidable onsite fire fighters, fire team leaders and members. they will understand and predict fire behavior, fight and extinguish complicated fires both offshore and onshore. Upon completion of the advance firefighting course, trainee will be competent to:
• Work as onsite incident commander during fire incident.
• Carry out quantitative and qualitative fire risk assessment
• Organize fire teams
• Fight fires
• Train fire parties and control fire-fighting operations
COURSE OUTLINE
• Fire Behavior
• Combustion
• Heat
• Determining Flashover Time
• Flashover
• Back draft
The Mechanisms of Fire Extinguishment
• Water Flow and Form
• Fog: Theory and Practice
• Solid and Straight Streams
• Firefighting Foams and Additives
The Development of Firefighting
• Ladder Company Functions
• Staffing a Company
• Staffing Trials
• Establishment of Rescue Companies
• Influence on the Fire Service by the Insurance Industry
• Progress in Firefighting
• European Methods
Firefighting Strategy
• Personnel Requirements
• Apparatus Response Time
• Establishment of a Command Post
• Span of Control
• Incident Command System
Firefighting Tactics
• Tactical Considerations
• Location of the Fire
• Extension Probability
• Types of Fires
• Analysis of the Fire Situation
The Action Plan – Working At A Fire
• Finding the Fire
• Rescue, Search, Entry, Ventilation
• Protection of Exposures
• Safety
• Communication
• Salvage, Overhaul, Extinguishment
• Cooperation of Other Agencies
Fire ground Control and Coordination
• Stress Situations
• Coordination
• Tactical Errors and Weaknesses
• Application of the Tactics
Safety on the Fire ground
• Building Collapse
• Burns, Smoke Inhalation, Electrocution
• Safety and Building Collapse
• Heat Hazard and Clothing
• Clothing Limitations and Problems
• Getting Lost
• Critical Incident Stress
The Fire Building – Hindrance And Help
• Vertical Spread of Heat and Smoke
• Structural Failure
• Building Collapse
• Mill Construction
• Collapse from Water
Sprinkler Operations
• Checking the Supply
• Sprinkler Flow
• Automatic Wet-Pipe System
• Automatic Dry-Pipe System
• Deluge Systems
• Non-Automatic Systems
Ladder Company Operations
• Some Common Mistakes
• Ladder Company Positioning
• Necessity of Assigning Tools
• Use of Ground Ladders
• Need for Scaling Ladders
Engine Company Operations
• Hydrants
• Tandem Pumping
• Hydrant-to-Pumper Layout
• Hose Operations, Large-Diameter Hose
• Hydrant Selection
• Lines Taken From A Pumper
• Restricted Inlet Flow
• Delivering The Water
• Interior and Exterior Attack
Pre-Fire Planning
• Stress on No variables
• Post-Fire Analysis
• Evaluation Standards
Major Fires
• Logistical Factors
• Command Structure
• Staging Area
• Fire Officials of Disaster Area
The Everyday Fire
• Plastics, Oil Burners
• Chimney, and Attic Fires
• Mercantile, and Taxpayer Fires
• Multiple-Dwelling Fires
• Apartments
• Factory Fires
Special-Problem Fires
• High-Rise Fires
• Transportation Fires
• Hazardous Materials
• Aircraft Fires
• Fires In Places of Worship and Assembly
Emergency Response Management
• Identifying the key components of a Safety Management System (SMS)
• Emergency control
• Team and personnel training
• Resources and organization of the team and support facilities
• Investigation
• Safety Management Systems
• Relevant key elements…