How to Burp Draft | Failed Primer (Rural Water Supply - E1)

FAILED PRIMER: When your pumper's primer fails, there's still a way to deliver the water you need without losing tank water. How? Learn from water supply expert Andy Soccodato in this simple 5-step video for firefighters in rural and metro environments alike.
FREE CHECKLIST: Download your free episode guide, complete with a checklist, equipment list and a bio on Andy! tft.com/burp-draft-checklist
Rural Water Supply:
Go deep into the Tennessee woods to learn advanced tactics for how to get better water from places you never thought possible, whether your municipal system fails or you're miles from a hydrant. Instructors Andy Soccodato (The Water Thieves) and Henry Lovett (Water Supply Innovations) unveil their secrets in this eight-part educational series.
0:00 - 1:38 Overview (PART 1)
1:38 - 2:25 What You Need (PART 2)
2:25 - 7:04 How To Do It (PART 3)
7:04 - 10:20 Review and Mistakes (PART 4)
10:20 - 13:16 Method Variations (PART 5)
How to Burp Draft (Rural Water Supply - E1)
Check out these other helpful links:
Request a TFT Product Demonstration: tft.com/Dealers
Check out our Firefighter Learning Hub: tft.com/Learn
******************************** FOLLOW THE TASK FORCE TIPS TEAM
► / taskforcetips
► / taskforcetips
► / task-force-tips
► / taskforcetips
Visit Our Website: tft.com/
#firefighting #fire #watersupply #ruralwatersupply #taskforcetips #waterthieves

Пікірлер: 19

  • @jerryhughes5380
    @jerryhughes53802 ай бұрын

    I ABSOLUTLY LOVE THE BURP DRAFT!! I never heard of it before. I always let the non-collapsable draft section fill with tank water before I spun the impeller to "catch a draft." The trick to making sure your draft section filled with water was to watch the bubbles (displaced air pocket) rise to the surface of the water. When the bubbles slow from many to few it means you have displaced enough air to reverse the flow in the tube. The Burp Draft is much more efficient!! Bravo to the brothers who figured out how to do it (was it y'all that was the first to think of it?). Helpful hint: Lug onto an available 2-1/2" discharge port and throw the open butt into the drink as a Prime Retention Line (PRL). Crack the PRL just enough to maintain a draft and you never lose prime. Chief Hughes Battalion 1 (retired) Chicago FD PS Love that cab over Ford! I drove them as an Engr. The 5 speed stick (pumped in 5th gear) was a joy to drive. Pump and roll capability if you knew how to defeat the drive axle while coasting.

  • @phatboizbackyardkustomz9006
    @phatboizbackyardkustomz900619 күн бұрын

    We call that back flow prime and it can be done without a intake valve. Just more efficient with the valve.

  • @kuie5418
    @kuie54184 ай бұрын

    Great start to series... looking fwd to the next vid

  • @TaskForceTips

    @TaskForceTips

    4 ай бұрын

    Thanks! Stay tuned! Episode 2 drops on Monday.

  • @imjeremy51
    @imjeremy512 күн бұрын

    Thats it, we're going to start carrying bowling pins instead of dead blows.

  • @brandonp.9294
    @brandonp.92943 ай бұрын

    SO am i understanding correctly that tank fill is enough to suffice the "must be flowing water" in the 4 must?

  • @guyincognito1431

    @guyincognito1431

    2 ай бұрын

    si.

  • @alexkitner5356

    @alexkitner5356

    17 күн бұрын

    Yes, since its vented its functionally the same as any discharge. I was taught on older engines that I could throttle up to my discharge pressure and set my relief valve by thinking of it as a discharge and then switch from the tank fill to the discharge that line is hooked to because both were 2-1/2" and it would be close to your pdp. Now with pressure mode and poly tanks its not really relevant.

  • @kennethcolliejr9826
    @kennethcolliejr98264 ай бұрын

    Can you still Do Burb Drafting while flowing landlines?

  • @coreyhudgins7647

    @coreyhudgins7647

    4 ай бұрын

    they discussed it near the end of the video

  • @egarcia549
    @egarcia549Ай бұрын

    Why you have two handles for tank to pump?

  • @alexkitner5356

    @alexkitner5356

    24 күн бұрын

    Have been given two reasons, one being that on a hill you might have preference between a front and rear to get all the tank capacity. The other reason is the limitation of a single 2 or 2.5" connection on flow, with it being necessary to have two tank to pump valves if running a deluge at higher discharge volumes. Both have some merit and some potential drawbacks. I also don't mind the idea of having a backup to get tank water in a situation where quick water from the tank is imperative early in an operation.

  • @ukiruralfirebrigade2929
    @ukiruralfirebrigade29293 ай бұрын

    If you have a full tank could you not also prime your drafting line by backfilling it with water? Acknowledged, it wouldn't work so well if your drafting lines have a foot-valve.

  • @orange3203

    @orange3203

    3 ай бұрын

    This is another technique. You let water back out the suction. Very slowly increase your rpms and you will reverse the flow of the water.

  • @bryanb7471

    @bryanb7471

    3 ай бұрын

    I do this pretty much as a default. Often faster than priming and saves wear on the primer.

  • @orange3203

    @orange3203

    3 ай бұрын

    @@bryanb7471 we're all air primers now so I don't worry about wear and tear. If you arn't in a rush it's still a good thing to practice just in case you need it.

  • @bryanb7471

    @bryanb7471

    3 ай бұрын

    @@orange3203 Our newest has an air primer with auto function, super nice. The others are still vane primers. Still a good skill to practice as you said.

  • @alexkitner5356

    @alexkitner5356

    24 күн бұрын

    This is the way I learned, and understood it to be easier on the pump that trying to push bursts of air thru. Also, I havent tested that exact scenario but our two newest pieces have electronic pump control that bugs out when it senses air in the pump and will throttle down to idle automatically. I have had a slug of air when going from tank to pressurized water supply, despite bleeding all apparent air cause this to happen, multiple times with one apparatus to the point I now expect it and account for it. Mostly I'm running a top mount with plumbed electric intake valves and triple air primers so burping is not really an issue often but good to know how to deal if all else fails.