 Hi, I'm Brendan Simmar, qualified firefighter at Danny Ong Fire Station B Platoon. I'm here today at the CFA Project Expo with the Attack Pack hose coil project. The project came around after we had a number of incidents where the initial attack line was delayed due to kinking or issues with deployment. Through some research on the internet we found a system from the United States, the Cleveland Load or the hose coil. It was developed by their forestry service in the late 70s, early 80s and has been proven to work really effectively in urban environments. The hose coil pretty much consists of a 30 metre length of hose that's called around itself, a retaining strap and some elastic bands. Very simple to carry. We can either carry it on our shoulder or under our arm to the incident. Once the coil has been deployed and charged with water we end up with the full 30 metres charged in an area no bigger than two to three square metres. It has a number of benefits. It's simple to deploy. We get 30 metres of hose at the deployment site. We can deploy it in high-rise or multi-storey environments on landings and then stand the hose up out of the way once it's been deployed. Also can be used in wildfire environments if you need to bowl out another length of hose or add an additional length of hose in a wildfire environment. Very simple to use in that facet as well. The other benefit of the hose coil is that we can pick the fully charged line up and stand it up against a wall or handrail if we need to create access or regress for anyone evacuating the building or for firefighting operations. Those pretty simply in our current vehicle. We've got it stowed here in the flake tray from a heavy pumper at Danionong.