Model of early manual fire engine, ca. 1680.

Made:
1680 in England
Model of early manual fire engine, ca. 1680

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Model of early manual fire engine, ca. 1680
Science Museum Group Collection
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Model of early manual fire engine, ca. 1680.

This is believed to be the earliest existing model of a fire engine. It was probably made by a seventeenth century fire engine maker to show to customers, as the provision of full-size handles would seem to indicate. The engine would be worked by a man on each side, pulling down on the handles alternately. The engine consists of two vertical pumps in a metal cistern mounted on a sled. The cistern had to be filled from water buckets. The pumps alternately force water into a large copper air vessel placed between them. When the water level rises above the outlet pipe going to the nozzle, the air is compressed and ejects the water in a continuous stream, an innovation of Hans Hautsch of Nuremberg in 1655.

Details

Category:
Firefighting
Object Number:
1948-337
Materials:
metal and copper
Measurements:
overall: 12.5984 x 6.6929 x 20.4724 in.; 320 x 170 x 520 mm
type:
fire engines and models
credit:
G. Gabb