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Discussion Starter · #1 · (Edited)
While I don't model any particular era, I do have a soft spot for the 50's - 70's era, the Transition Era. Most of my buildings seem to be from that period not the least my little 1950's era Laser Cut Fire Station. The only issue with that structure is it didn't have a typical "Hose Drying Tower" with it ... so I decided to build my own out of basswood.

A Pictorial Build:









With the Hose Hanging Rods in place:



As it stand at the Moment:

 

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Discussion Starter · #3 ·
@sjm9911

Thanks and the towers came as apart of a structure or separate - there really was no standard for them other than they had to be high enough to hang hoses from and have a means of getting the hoses verticle.

As for the Driver's - I'll have to talk to them BUT the cost of putting the fence back up will come out of their pay packets - oh wait, poo - they're all volunteers :(

I meant to include the dimensions of the thing above but it is 3 1/2" high 3/4" square at the base and 5/8" square at the top. The hose hangers are .020 Brass Rod and I have Tichy windows that I am considering putting in, if I can at this late stage. This was only suppose to be a mock up for when I built the proper one :)
 

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Discussion Starter · #6 ·
That is one heck of a tower! It is definitely a shame that it has been turned into a beer garden restaurant :( All too many things, not just fire houses and railway things, from the past are being converted or knocked down or just left to decay and vandalism - it really is a shame.

The town up the road from where I live (in the bush) was a fairly major freight hub early last century, complete with repair shops and round house. Now, Alstom took everything over and there isn't much of the original left.
 

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Discussion Starter · #10 ·
How do they get the hoses up that tower you built :)
Generally they used a pulley and rope system. A rope was slung over a beam or pulley and the hoses were attached to it then pulled up. The weight of the hose would allow it to be lowered once dried.

Later on they may have gone to using winches, but that is just a possibility and not a certainty.
 

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Generally they used a pulley and rope system. A rope was slung over a beam or pulley and the hoses were attached to it then pulled up. The weight of the hose would allow it to be lowered once dried.

Later on they may have gone to using winches, but that is just a possibility and not a certainty.

Ahh never seen the system used so I was like no ladder or no way to get to the top to hang them lol. I'm sure n scale would be rough to put in the pulley system and probably would not be visible anyways so why waste the effort...
 

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Discussion Starter · #13 ·
Ahh never seen the system used so I was like no ladder or no way to get to the top to hang them lol. I'm sure n scale would be rough to put in the pulley system and probably would not be visible anyways so why waste the effort...
Quite a few did have ladders and stairs in them as well, and most likely for the reason you mentioned. Many also had a look out/observation house on top of them or Bells that they would sound before the invent of sirens I guess.

About the only things I might add is an observation house/bell housing and hoses hanging from the "beams". I am also looking at adding some windows and a door to it just for the hell of it and to see if I can :)
 

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Discussion Starter · #14 ·
Our hose towers are built into the fire station building…..and are heated with a roof over it….hoses won’t dry in the winter when it’s well below freezing….
Most here, and in Australia, are covered as well; although, I don't think too many are still in use for drying hoses, I maybe wrong of course. I just haven't gotten around to putting a roof on mine yet :)
 

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Yea, they still use them. As for the bells, in the 1920s , they had air whistles, like on a train. Compressed air that filled large storage tanks. They then had a cog system that ran the system. You put a cog in that corasponded to how many and how long the whistle blew. This told you the area of the fire. The whistle was tested 2x a day and was wound up daily. I have no idea how it worked, just that it did. It was made by the gamewell compony.
 
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