Depends on the size and type. Some don't carry any at all, and must be fed from a hydrant or water tanker truck.
That depends on the size and materials of the fire truck. Some firetrucks hold as much as 3000 gallons of water and can weigh 50,000 pounds or more.
about 40,000 lbs
Some smile engines like a brush truck may only have a few hundred gallons of water. Large tanker trucks may carry thousands of gallons of water to a fire.
Udh
no.... you can't ... shame really
it can hold anywhere from 750-1000 gallons of water
Yes fire truck is red.
we set the fire alarm off accidently in a building and the truck turnedup. How much do they charge to come?
Varies by type of truck, e.g., pumper, tender, tanker, hood-and-ladder, brush truck, etc.
Fire feeds on oxygen, and water does not have much of it.
weight of a fire truck depends on the size and cinfiguration of the truck brushpumpers(flat bed 4x4) will obviously not weigh same as a tanker we have a tanker/ engine that can pump 400 gallons a minute, and carries 3000 gallons of water this truck loaded weighs about 56000 pounds we have an engine that carries 1200 gallons of water and rescue equipment this truck only weighs about 28000 pounds a brushpumper with 300 gallons would weigh about 8000 pounds a rescue squad depends on size of truck and equipment carried on it a ladder truck is a different weight again hope this helps a little there are all types and sizes of fire trucks
A fire engine starts in much the same manner as any other motor vehicle. Probably more like a truck, but hey, it's a truck chassis with the pump, tank and whatever else built onto it. Why wouldn't it start like a truck? On the inside, at least, a fire engine is just a truck with the "fire stuff" added on.