They do at the scene of the fire, and EMS leaves their ambulances running on scene as well. Cops leave their cars running while out and about, and usually off if they’re parked at the station.
More to the original point though, I’ve never seen cop cars, fire trucks, or ambulances idling at their respective stations. Not a clue what SOOP sees in his area.
I’m fine with on-scene idling because the expectation is that emergency services need to be fast and reliable. (Also I’m pretty sure that fire trucks, the big ones anyway, have a lot of extra machinery that needs to be powered)
While I certainly agree with your overall point, I’d guess that firefighters have someone who’s job it is to start the engine/truck while their fellows are donning their gear.
Let’s be honest though;
Push-to-start exists. There is zero reason they can afford all their SWAT bullshit and can’t afford to make a car that auto starts when whoever is carrying the fob gets in.
They don’t leave firetrucks running…
They do at the scene of the fire, and EMS leaves their ambulances running on scene as well. Cops leave their cars running while out and about, and usually off if they’re parked at the station.
More to the original point though, I’ve never seen cop cars, fire trucks, or ambulances idling at their respective stations. Not a clue what SOOP sees in his area.
I’m fine with on-scene idling because the expectation is that emergency services need to be fast and reliable. (Also I’m pretty sure that fire trucks, the big ones anyway, have a lot of extra machinery that needs to be powered)
While I certainly agree with your overall point, I’d guess that firefighters have someone who’s job it is to start the engine/truck while their fellows are donning their gear.
Let’s be honest though; Push-to-start exists. There is zero reason they can afford all their SWAT bullshit and can’t afford to make a car that auto starts when whoever is carrying the fob gets in.
Not that turning a key takes any longer than pushing a button
Also, fire trucks don’t have a key to start. You set one knob to on and twist the starter knob.