We had a community event at our local fire station (basically a shed in the middle of dairy farms). They said that the vast majority of callouts were for car fires. Their tanker holds about 5000 litres (~1200gal) IIRC. They have no chance against an EV fire, they'd just have to stand back and watch it burn and prevent spread into and eroded areas where it might get away.
We had a community event at our local fire station (basically a shed in the middle of dairy farms). They said that the vast majority of callouts were for car fires. Their tanker holds about 5000 litres (~1200gal) IIRC. They have no chance against an EV fire, they'd just have to stand back and watch it burn and prevent spread into and eroded areas where it might get away.
Same thing for me a few years back. There's no way any local volunteer fire department is staffed or equipped to handle an EV fire. Hell, the Sanibel, FL department couldn't handle golf cart fires (msn.com) caused by Hurricane Ian.
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