View Full Version : Nacka Fire Departments new Aerial Ladder Platform
Bobjork
3rd January 2009, 23:51
Just found out that the correct word is Aerial Ladder Platform...
Well, as you can see in the gallery Nacka Fire Department just got their new vehicle.
A Scania P380DB 6x2*4 MLA with a yellow Bronto Skylift F37RLX.
This is a very odd "thing" because:
It is yellow.
It is 37m.
Normally they are white and 30-32m
Another odd thing is that it isn't a CrewCab, but thats probably because it's impossible to fit a 37m Bronto on a CrewCab body...
A picture: http://www.truckandbusforum.com/gallery/showimage.php?i=1121
And what about a movie: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tM3u-dcrfOQ
This is going to replace the old Scania from 1996:
http://www.truckandbusforum.com/gallery/showimage.php?i=1077
Energumen
3rd January 2009, 23:56
Nice one Bobjork.
Maybe the old Scanias are Nacka'd now.
G-CPTN
4th January 2009, 00:07
A Scania P380DB 6x2*4 MLA
What does *4 mean (after 6x2 which implies 6 wheels 2 driven)
And what about a movie: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tM3u-dcrfOQ
Hehe! (LOL) Gris in Scandi is Pig in English . . .
(and Älgtjur is Elk or Moose)
Bobjork
4th January 2009, 00:15
What does *4 mean (after 6x2 which implies 6 wheels 2 driven).
the *4 means that there are 4 steering on four wheels, the front and the rear axle.
(http://www.scania.com/news/Events/archive/1997/brussels/Press_13534.asp)
Hehe! (LOL) Gris in Scandi is Pig in English . . .
Yes, thats true. And this gris speaks french on double speed :)
The old Scania is probably going to be sold. Don't think anyone will scrap a turntable ladder from 1996. Always some small station somewhere that need a new ladder to replace their old 1970-ladder or something :)
G-CPTN
4th January 2009, 00:20
the *4 means that there are 4 steering on four wheels, the front and the rear axle.
(http://www.scania.com/news/Events/archive/1997/brussels/Press_13534.asp)
Ah! that makes sense . . .
I didn't know that.
Thanks.
Bobjork
4th January 2009, 00:30
Ah! that makes sense . . .
I didn't know that.
Thanks.
Well I didn't know that the first time I saw it two years ago.
And then I found it on Scanias homepage.
Many 6-wheeled fire vehicles has steering on the rear axle.
Much easier to corner.
There are buses with steering on the rear axle to.
Drove one of those last summer when I was applying for a job at Westin bus (they wanted more experienced drivers though). Lidingö Depot only has 4-wheeled buses (and one articulated).
G-CPTN
4th January 2009, 00:36
First time I saw steering tag axles was in Southern Italy in 1979.
Energumen
4th January 2009, 00:40
I absolutely refuse to make any snide comments about Italian vehicles having steering at both end, or tanks with one forward gear and sixteen reverse.
It would be ungentlemanly, un European, but so me.
Bobjork
4th January 2009, 00:49
First time I saw steering tag axles was in Southern Italy in 1979.
Well of course I had seen it earlier, but first time I saw 6x2*4 I did not know what that meaned.
The articulated buses in Nacka (Volvo) have steering on the rear axles too. So first time I saw that must have been as a young boy in the early 90's.
Energumen
4th January 2009, 00:59
You will not know about Italian tanks then, I assume.
Bobjork
4th January 2009, 01:04
You will not know about Italian tanks then, I assume.
No, I don't know about them. But I know a lot about Italian 8-wheeled articulated trolley buses.
Energumen
4th January 2009, 01:35
Ah, but they did not have those during the war.
Don't mention the war!. English Joke
Bobjork
4th January 2009, 02:02
Ah, but they did not have those during the war.
Don't mention the war!. English Joke
Don't mention the war! I mentioned it once, but I think I got away with it, as Basil Fawlty says in Fawlty Towers.
Big fan of Monty Python.
And you're right, Stockholm did not have those during the war. They were built by Alfa-Romeo in 1950-1951 and was taken out of service five years later...
Western SMT
4th January 2009, 10:44
or tanks with one forward gear and sixteen reverse.
It would be ungentlemanly, un European, but so me.
Not politically correct as they say Energumen but from the stories I have heard certain nations were adept at finding more reverse gears than forward ones.
Energumen
4th January 2009, 16:26
Just call me Gino. Well, Gina really. Shush not everybody knows that.
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