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  2. Sutphen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sutphen

    The newest unit being at Truck 3 on the city's West Side. The current roster is 5. As of 2010, this will also include 3 engines with no aerial ladders also built by Sutphen. [citation needed] Eden, North Carolina, purchased the first SLR75 demo. [citation needed] Lenoir, North Carolina, has a 2023 rescue pumper. The truck is named Engine 2 and ...

  3. Pierce Manufacturing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierce_Manufacturing

    Such aerial manufacturers included Snorkel, Pitman, Aerial Innovations (AI), Ladder Towers Incorporated (LTI), Smeal, Bronto Skylift and Nova Quintech (whose assets Pierce/Oshkosh acquired in 1997). In addition to its main facilities in Wisconsin, it also has facilities in Bradenton, Florida. The Florida facility is a manufacturing site for the ...

  4. Ferrara Fire Apparatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrara_Fire_Apparatus

    Ferrara Fire Apparatus manufactures a wide variety of fire apparatus including the MVP Rescue Pumper, Custom Pumpers, Aerial Ladders, Aerial Platforms, Industrial Pumpers, Tankers, Rescue, and Wildland trucks. Ferrara's new Inundator Super Pumper is recognized as the world's largest capacity NFPA-rated fire engine.

  5. Seagrave Fire Apparatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seagrave_Fire_Apparatus

    Seagrave Fire Apparatus LLC is an American fire apparatus manufacturer that specializes in pumper and rescue units, as well as aerial towers. In addition to manufacturing new equipment, they refurbish, repair and upgrade older Seagrave apparatus, including National Fire Protection Association updates to equipment. [ 1 ]

  6. How NC insurers use drone, satellite photos to drop home ...

    www.aol.com/nc-insurers-drone-satellite-photos...

    A month later, Nationwide, which writes about 7.3% of the state’s insurance policies, disclosed that it would drop 10,525 homeowners’ policies in Eastern North Carolina. It’s unclear if the ...

  7. Peter Pirsch and Sons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Pirsch_and_Sons

    Throughout the 1930s and 1940s a wide range of fire engines, including articulated ladder trucks were made, with power coming mostly from Hercules or Waukesha engines. Pirsch first introduced aerial ladders in the 1930s, including the first fully powered 100–foot aerial ladder device in the United States in 1935.

  8. Wing Enterprises - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wing_Enterprises

    Wing Enterprises is an American company headquartered in Springville, Utah company, the largest American manufacturer of ladders as of 2005. [1] The company produces the Little Giant Ladder System, a convertible aluminium ladder system. The founder of Wing Enterprises, Harold Ray "Hal" Wing, came across a prototype of the ladder in Germany in

  9. Aerial work platform - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerial_work_platform

    Replacing an advertising poster in London using an aerial work platform. An aerial work platform (AWP), also an aerial device, aerial lift, boom lift, bucket truck, cherry picker, elevating work platform (EWP), mobile elevating work platform (MEWP), or scissor lift, is a mechanical device used to provide temporary access for people or equipment to inaccessible areas, usually at height.