Product Details:
Size/Diameter | 65mm |
Material | Canvas |
Working Pressure | 1.0 MPa |
Usage/Application | Fire Fighting |
Color | White |
Packing Type | Roll |
We provide our valuable clients a wide range of Fire Hose Pipe. These products are available in various lengths and thickness that renders effective performance. Our products go through rigorous quality parameters before being introduced in the market; thereby we provide assurance to deliver a quality tested range. The Fire Hose we offer are available in the market at industry leading prices that to in the committed time frame.
Features:
Product Details:
Diameter | 65mm |
Packaging Type | Roll |
Material | Canvas |
Hose Color | White |
Lining | With Lining |
Pressure | 1.0 MPa |
Flow Rate | 400 L/hr |
We provide our valuable clients a wide range of Fire Hose Pipe. These products are available in various lengths and thickness that renders effective performance. Our products go through rigorous quality parameters before being introduced in the market; thereby we provide assurance to deliver a quality tested range. The Fire Hose we offer are available in the market at industry leading prices that to in the committed time frame.
Features:
Product Details:
Usage/Application | Offices, Hospitals, Schools, Colleges, Factories, etc. |
Packaging Type | Roll |
Reel length | 30 m, 40 m |
Material | Rubber |
Hose Color | Red |
Pressure | 0.8 MPa |
Until the mid-19th century, most fires were fought by water transported to the scene in buckets. Original hand pumpers discharged their water through a small pipe or monitor attached to the top of the pump tub. It was not until the late 1960s that hoses became widely available to convey water more easily from the hand pumps, and later steam pumpers, to the fire.
In Amsterdam in the Dutch Republic, the Superintendent of the Fire Brigade, Jan van der Heyden, and his son Nicholaas took firefighting to its next step with the fashioning of the first fire hose in 1673. These 50-foot (15 m) lengths of leather were sewn together like a boot leg.[4] Even with the limitations of pressure, the attachment of the hose to the gooseneck nozzle allowed closer approaches and more accurate water application. Van der Heyden was also credited with an early version of a suction hose using wire to keep it rigid. In the United States, the fire hose was introduced in Philadelphia in 1794. This canvas hose proved insufficiently durable, and sewn leather hose was then used. The sewn leather hose tended to burst, so a hose fabricated of leather fastened together with copper rivets and washers was invented by members of Philadelphia's Humane Hose Company.
Around 1890, unlined fire hoses made of circular woven linen yarns began to replace leather hoses. They were certainly much lighter. As the hose fibers, made of flax, became wet, they swelled up and tightened the weave, causing the hose to become watertight. Unlined hoses, because of their lack of durability, were rapidly replaced with rubber hoses in municipal fire service use. They continued to be used for use on interior hose lines and hose racks until the 1960s, and are still used in some areas for forestry applications.
Following the invention of the vulcanization process as a means of curing raw soft rubber into a harder, more useful product, the fire service slowly made the transition from bulky and unreliable leather hose to the unlined linen hose, then to a multi-layer, rubber lined and coated hose with interior fabric reinforcement. This rubber hose was as bulky, heavy, and stiff as a leather hose, but was not prone to leaking. It also proved more durable than unlined linen hose. Its wrapped construction resembled some hoses used today by industry, for example, fuel delivery hoses used to service airliners.