Ford Model T Chemical Hose Car
Small Communities ยท No Pump
This chemical/hose car is typical of vehicles that were purchased by small communities to replace horse-drawn and
hand-drawn apparatus early in the 20th Century. These light-weight rigs usually had no pump.
The large metal tank behind the driver's seat contained approximately forty gallons of water mixed with soda. An open-top glass vial inside the tank at its top contained sulphuric acid. To extinguish a fire, the tank would be rotated in its cradle till the acid spilled into the soda-water solution. The resulting chemical reaction would pressurize the tank to more than 200 pounds per square inch. A pre-connected hose line with a small smooth-bore tip would then be used to apply the soda-acid-water solution to the fire.
In addition, this vehicle carried a quantity of hose that could be used to provide a supply line between a hydrant and a fire pumper. Thus, this type of apparatus was known as a chemical/hose car.

This chemical/hose car is typical of vehicles that were purchased by small communities to replace horse-drawn and
hand-drawn apparatus early in the 20th Century. These light-weight rigs usually had no pump.
The large metal tank behind the driver's seat contained approximately forty gallons of water mixed with soda. An open-top glass vial inside the tank at its top contained sulphuric acid. To extinguish a fire, the tank would be rotated in its cradle till the acid spilled into the soda-water solution. The resulting chemical reaction would pressurize the tank to more than 200 pounds per square inch. A pre-connected hose line with a small smooth-bore tip would then be used to apply the soda-acid-water solution to the fire.
In addition, this vehicle carried a quantity of hose that could be used to provide a supply line between a hydrant and a fire pumper. Thus, this type of apparatus was known as a chemical/hose car.







