Sutphen Builds Short-Wheelbase, Maneuverable Pumpers for the Mabscott (WV) Volunteer Fire Department

The Rig | June 2020 

The Mabscott (WV) Volunteer Fire Department had previously purchased two custom engines from Sutphen Corp., so when it decided it needed new pumper on a short wheelbase that would be maneuverable for mountainous terrain, it again turned to Sutphen to build the rig.

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Sutphen Corporation built this custom pumper for the Mabscott (WV) Volunteer Fire Department on a Monarch Extreme-Duty chassis with an EZ Trac all wheel-drive system, a flat-roof, 56-inch extrended cab, a 450-HP Cummins L9 engine, and an Allison 3000 EVS Gen 5 automatic transmission.

Tim Zutaut, Mabscott’s chief, says the department’s single station in the Appalachian Mountains houses 18 volunteer firefighters, three engines, three tankers, a rescue truck, an aerial ladder, and a brush truck. “The roads get snowy and icy in the winter, and sometimes we have to take our trucks off road, so we wanted four-wheel drive on our new pumper,” Zutaut points out. “We also wanted the pumper to have a short wheelbase and good angles of approach and departure.”

Justin Howell, Southeast region sales manager for Sutphen, says Sutphen had previously built a number of wildland urban interface (WUI) pumpers on short wheelbases with four-wheel drive and pump-and-roll capability. “We extracted some of those features and incorporated them into a short-wheelbase pumper with an EZ Trac all-wheel-drive system,” Howell says. “The finished pumper has a 167inch -wheelbase, a 27-foot 9-inch overall length, and a 9-foot 6-inch overall height.”

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Mabscott’s new pumper has a 17-degree angle of approach

Harry Sutphen, owner of Heritage Fire Equipment, who sold the engine to Mabscott, notes the new pumper is built on a Monarch heavy duty custom chassis with a flat-roof 56-inch extended cab set up for four firefighters, powered by a 450-hp Cummins L9 diesel engine, and an Allison 3000 EVS Gen5 automatic transmission, with a 320-amp Leece Neville alternator. “The pumper has a 17-degree angle of approach, and a 15-degree angle of departure,” Sutphen says, “a flip-up tailboard, and a 10-inch-high urban interface steel bumper with a steel skid plate underneath.” He adds that the pumper has more than 200 feet of compartment space covered by Amdor roll-up doors and an Alco-Lite ladder package of one 24-foot two section extension ladder, one 14-foot roof ladder, and a 10-foot folding ladder on the rig’s right side.

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Angle of departure on the Mabscott pumper is 15 degrees, which is assisted by the vehicle’s flip-up tail board.

Zutaut notes that Mabscott’s new pumper has a Hale QFlo 1,250-gpm single-stage pump, a 750-gallon water tank, two 1¾-inch hose crosslays (200 and 150 feet), a 200-foot 2½-inch preconnect at the rear, an Akron 3444 High Riser 1,250-gpm deck gun, and a booster reel with 200 feet of one-inch hose. Mabscott carries 800 feet of 4-inch LDH in its low hosebed (43 inches from the tailboard to the bottom of the hosebed).

Lighting on the Mabscott pumper includes a 72-inch Whelen Freedom IV 12-module LED light bar, a Whelen L31 LED beacon, FRC Spectra 12-volt LED telescoping scene lights, and FireTech WL-2000 LED headlights. A Federal Q2B siren is mounted in the grille.

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