Showing 335 items matching "forests commission victoria (fcv)"
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Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Threader tool
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)...Forests Commission Victoria (FCV) Hand tools Tool used ...Tool used to thread pipesforests commission victoria (fcv), hand tools -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Heavy brush cutter
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)... was useful when clearing road embankments Forests Commission Victoria ...Used to clear scrub and undergrowth. Straight blade was useful when clearing road embankmentsHeavy Brush cutter Colour on handle indicates FCV district ownershipforests commission victoria (fcv), hand tools -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Heavy brush cutter
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)...Used to clear scrub and undergrowth. Forests Commission ...Used to clear scrub and undergrowth.Heavy Brush cutterforests commission victoria (fcv), hand tools -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Fern Hook
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)...Used to clear scrub and undergrowth. Forests Commission ...Used to clear scrub and undergrowth.Fern Hookforests commission victoria (fcv), hand tools -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Wedge planting tool
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV) Hand tools Metal planting spade ...Used to plant seedlings in pine and hardwood plantationsMetal planting spadeforests commission victoria (fcv), hand tools -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Hand Shears
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)...Forests Commission Victoria (FCV) Hand tools Metal Hand ...Metal Hand Shearsforests commission victoria (fcv), hand tools -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Wright Reciprocating Saw
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV).... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV) Forest Harvesting Hand tools ...Continuous cutting chain was patented in 1905 by Samuel Bens of San Francisco, while the first portable chainsaw was developed and patented in 1918 by Canadian millwright James Shand. But the main advancements of modern petrol chainsaws occurred in Europe in the 1920s and 30s where Andreas Stihl is often hailed as the "father of the chainsaw" After the second world war lighter materials, metal alloys and improved engine designs revolutionised the logging and timber industry. This Wright Reciprocating Saw was made in Sheboygan, Wisconsin, between 1960 and 1962. Its a Rare GS-5020A model. It has a 7.06 cu. in. (115.7 cc), two-stroke motor, which weighed 25 lbs. (11.3 kg) complete. The blade doesn't stop reciprocating when the saw is running because it's attached directly to the crankshaft. There is no clutch system.Reciprocating Saw.forests commission victoria (fcv), forest harvesting, hand tools -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Airstream protective helmet
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)... and safety hardhats. Forests Commission Victoria (FCV) Protective ...The Forests Commission took safety very seriously, long before it became standard practice in the bush. The Chairman of the Commission, Alan Threader, personally chaired the safety committee. Sandy Dobbin was appointed as the first "safety officer" in the early 1970s. There were many innovations including safety boots and safety hardhats.Hardhats designed for use by bulldozer operators. Has inbuilt small battery operated fan to push a screen of air in front of drivers face to keep dust away. Made redundant with the advent of closed, air-conditioned cabins. Made in UK c 1981RACAL Benalla T120forests commission victoria (fcv), protective clothing, bushfire -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Rappel model with protective equipment, harness and rope drop bag
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)... in the Orbost Forest District. Forests Commission Victoria (FCV ...Based on the earlier successful tests with the RAAF Dragonfly in 1948-49, together with the effective use of aircraft during the extensive Gippsland bushfires in March 1965, the Forests Commission took the plunge and contracted its own dedicated Bell 47G in the summer of 1965-66. This was an Australian first for any forest or bushfire agency. Rappelling trials at Snowy Plains and Tallangatta soon followed, which led to operations based at Heyfield with a two-man crew to quickly attack small fires in remote locations. The Heyfield rappel crew was another Australian first and remained in place for the following two fire seasons but lapsed after concerns from the Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA) about the stability of the small and underpowered Bell 47G. Later in 1982, after nearly 18 years absence, the Commission recommenced rappelling operations using larger and more powerful National Safety Council (NSCA) Bell 212 and Bell 412 helicopters based in Sale, Gippsland. During the 1983 bushfires, a specially trained and equipped FCV crew rappelled by rope from a hovering NSCA helicopter to suppress a small fire in remote terrain in the Orbost Forest District. Rappel model with protective equipment, harness and rope drop bagforests commission victoria (fcv), bushfire, bushfire aviation, safety equipment -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Kerosene pressure lantern in box
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)...Used at fire basecamps Forests Commission Victoria (FCV ...Used at fire basecampsKerosene pressure lanternTilleyforests commission victoria (fcv), bushfire, camping equipment -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Kerosene lantern
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)...Used at fire basecamps Forests Commission Victoria (FCV ...Used at fire basecampsKerosene lanternBeechworthforests commission victoria (fcv), bushfire, camping equipment -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Kerosene lantern
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)...Used at fire basecamps Forests Commission Victoria (FCV ...Used at fire basecampsKerosene lanternBeechworthforests commission victoria (fcv), bushfire, camping equipment -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
canvas water carry bag (large)
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)...Used at bushfire base camps Forests Commission Victoria ...Used at bushfire base campsCanvas water bag with cover and outlet hose Dept of Defence 1946 GARS makers Melbourne forests commission victoria (fcv), camping equipment, bushfire -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Shower head
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)...Used at bushfire base camps Forests Commission Victoria ...Used at bushfire base campsGalvanised metal bucket shower head and tapBruthen 100forests commission victoria (fcv), camping equipment, bushfire -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Shower head (canvas)
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)...Used at bushfire base camps Forests Commission Victoria ...Used at bushfire base campsCanvas bag shower head (no control tap)forests commission victoria (fcv), camping equipment, bushfire -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Helibox
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)... across Australia. Forests Commission Victoria (FCV) Bushfire ...The successful dropping of supplies to remote fire crews involved a great deal of experimentation. The result was a large heavy-duty cardboard container being developed in 1964 by Athol Hodgson from the FCV Fire Research Branch which employed fold-out wings and was called the “helibox”. It was suitable for supplies weighing less than 9 kg and best dropped from about 300 feet and became a standard technique. It was adopted Australia wide, but the wider availability of helicopters made the helibox eventually redundant.Unique to Victoria but adopted across Australia.Large cardboard box with "wings" to cause it to rotate when dropped from the air. With cut away sections to show how contents were packed Wings held in place by means of string office "Ty-Tite" fasteners.forests commission victoria (fcv), bushfire aviation, bushfire, camping equipment -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Metal Food safe
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)...used at fire camps Forests Commission Victoria (FCV ...used at fire campsMetal food safe Common before refrigeration was available in the bushBruthen 100forests commission victoria (fcv), bushfire, camping equipment -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Camp Cricket Bat
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)...Used at fire base camps between shifts Forests Commission ...Used at fire base camps between shiftsWooden Cricket Batforests commission victoria (fcv), bushfire, camping equipment -
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Coloured mapping inks and pens
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)... and exacting work but very rewarding. Forests Commission Victoria (FCV ...Coloured ink used to mark lines of paper maps. Could be used in pen or as a "wash" to colour areas with a soft sable hair paint brush Strict cartographic guidance was provided by the FCV’s 1947 publication - “Handbook of Conventional Signs and Symbols for Use in Forest Mapping and Plan Drawing”. It was slow and exacting work but very rewarding.Pelikan coloured inks in small glass bottlesPelikan forests commission victoria (fcv), mapping, forest measurement, surveying -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
Radio set
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)...After the 1939 bushfires, the Forests Commission invested ...After the 1939 bushfires, the Forests Commission invested heavily in a radically new communications network. After suffering some inevitable delays due to the War, radio VL3AA switched into full operation in October 1945 proudly beaming out 200 watts across the State. The communication systems were regarded at the time to be more technically advanced than the police and the military. These pioneering efforts were directed by Geoff Weste, and later technical experts like Rex Philpot, John Whitehead, Charlie Reisinger and many others who designed, built and repaired most of the radio equipment. There was a dedicated radio laboratory at Surrey Hills in Melbourne.Radio setManufactured by McLeod Electric - Derrinallumradios, forests commission victoria (fcv) -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
McArthur Forest Fire Danger Meter - Mk 5, 1992
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)... very well over the decades. Bushfire Forests Commission ...The Forest Fire Danger Index (FFDI) was originally invented by the grandfather of Australian bushfire science, Alan Grant McArthur, during the 1950s and ‘60s. Alan published his landmark paper, “Controlled burning in eucalypt forests” in 1962. Leaflet No. 80, as it was known, proved a turning point for forest and fire managers across Australia. More importantly, Alan was very practical forester and wanted his work to be useful to people in the field, so after several iterations he came up with the now familiar circular slide rule called the Forest Fire Danger Meter (FFDM). The Mk 4 version first appeared in operational use in 1967. This is the Mark 5 from 1992Alan McAthur's scientific legacy with the FFDI meter is unquestionably huge and has served forest firefighters very well over the decades.Control burning meter Series of circular slide rules to calculate Forest Fire Danger Index (FFDI)bushfire, forests commission victoria (fcv) -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
Presentation plaque from the "Woodpeckers"
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)... Commission Victoria (FCV) Presentation plaque from the "Woodpeckers ...In the post-war era from 1947 to the mid-1980s, the Forests Commission sponsored Australia's only military sawmilling unit, the 91 Forestry Squadron. It was a special reserve unit of the Royal Australian Engineers (RAE). Established and commanded by Commission forester and WW2 veteran, Major Ben Benallack, the "Woodpeckers" as they were known comprised a small pool of specialised soldiers capable of rapid mobilisation in the event of need. Several other Victorian departments such as the State Electricity Commission (SEC) did the same thing who supported a construction squadron based at Newborough in the Latrobe Valley. The scheme created a very active and capable part-time military group that completed many worthy projects across the State. In addition to their military training, the Woodpeckers operated bush sawmills, built timber bridges along the Murray River, the Snake Island Jetty, forest roads and performed various demolition tasks.Presentation plaque from the "Woodpeckers" Mounted on polished wooden burl forests commission victoria (fcv) -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
Sirex wood wasps
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV) Sirex wood wasps encased ...In 1949 the Commonwealth Forestry and Timber Bureau proposed a national planting program to make Australia more self-reliant in timber products after the shortages experienced during the war. The threat of introduced sirex woodwasp from Europe in the early 1950s and its eventual discovery on the Australian mainland in 1961 brought the softwood plantation program into question. However, quarantine and control measures using tree destruction and a nematode parasite was put in place.Sirex noctilio was a serious threat to softwood plantations in AustraliaSirex wood wasps encased in resinplantations, forests commission victoria (fcv) -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
Fire Beater - Canvas, c 1930s
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)... firefighting tool Bushfire Forests Commission Victoria (FCV) R P PWD ...Bushfire perimeter rather than bushfire area is the main control problem for firefighters on the ground. A conundrum rapidly compounded by spot fires. A small 5 ha fire can be nearly 1 km around the perimeter. That's a long way to build a control line by hand in rough bush. Dry firefighting techniques by hand were mostly confined to “knocking down” or “beating out” the flames, as well as "digging out". Digging or raking a “mineral earth” trail down to bare dirt proved most effective in forest fuels which, unlike grass, tend to retain heat and smoulder. Early tools were whatever happened to be close at hand. They were simple and primitive and included shovels, slashers, axes, hoes, beaters and rakes. A cut branch to beat the flames was often the only thing available. Farming and logging tools, developed over centuries of manual labour, and readily available at local hardware stores came into use, but little thought was given to size, weight, and balance. This canvas hose beater was based on a century-old design which used lengths of canvas fire hose rivetted together and lashed with wire to a broom handle. The hose was be soaked in water to improve its effectiveness. If the flames were more than a metre or so the user was generally not able to get close enough to extinguish the fire It's recommend that users lift no more than above knee height to conserve energy and let the beater to the work. For years foresters experimented with combination tools. In about 1952 fire beaters and other implements were being replaced with Rakuts and later RakehoesEarly firefighting toolBushfire beater - Canvas with wooden handleR P PWD (Public Works Department) The handle has painted markings which indicate which FCV District it belonged to.bushfire, forests commission victoria (fcv) -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
Fire Beater - Leather, c 1940s
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)... firefighting tool Bushfire Forests Commission Victoria (FCV) Bushfire ...Bushfire perimeter rather than bushfire area is the main control problem for firefighters on the ground. A conundrum rapidly compounded by spot fires. A small 5 ha fire can be nearly 1 km around the perimeter. That's a long way to build a control line by hand in rough bush. Dry firefighting techniques by hand were mostly confined to “knocking down” or “beating out” the flames, as well as "digging out". Digging or raking a “mineral earth” trail down to bare dirt proved most effective in forest fuels which, unlike grass, tend to retain heat and smoulder. Early tools were whatever happened to be close at hand. They were simple and primitive and included shovels, slashers, axes, hoes, beaters and rakes. A cut branch to beat the flames was often the only thing available. Farming and logging tools, developed over centuries of manual labour, and readily available at local hardware stores came into use, but little thought was given to size, weight, and balance. This leather beater was based on a century-old stockman's design which used green cow hide leather lashed to a broom handle. It's recommend that users lift no more than above knee height to conserve energy and let the beater to the work. For years foresters experimented with combination tools. In about 1952 fire beaters and other implements were being replaced with Rakuts and later RakehoesEarly firefighting toolBushfire beater - Leather with wooden handlebushfire, forests commission victoria (fcv) -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
Helibox, Cardboard food delivery box, Early 1960s
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV) Large cardboard box with "wings ...The successful dropping of supplies to remote fire crews involved a great deal of experimentation. The result was a large heavy-duty cardboard container being developed in 1964 by Athol Hodgson from the FCV Fire Research Branch which employed fold-out wings and was called the “helibox”. It was suitable for supplies weighing less than 9 kg and best dropped from about 300 feet and became a standard technique. It was adopted Australia wide, but the wider availability of helicopters made the helibox eventually redundant. Unique to Victoria but adopted across Australia.Large cardboard box with "wings" to cause it to rotate when dropped from the air. Wings held in place by means of string office "Ty-Tite" fasteners.bushfire, forests commission victoria (fcv) -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
Safety box for fusee matches and DAIDS
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV) Fusees Wooden safety box lined ...The Forests Commission developed the use of helicopters for aerial ignition from the mid 1960s. Bryant and May at Richmond worked with the Commission to develop a Delayed Action Incendiary Device. DAIDs as the were known, had an overall length of 180 mm, striker end length - 10 mm. Ignition end length - 80 mm, then a layer of high melting point wax (to prevent accidental ignition when rubbing together in transit). Both ends coated with a modified match head compound with safety fuse exposed length between coated match ends. There was a 17-second delay from when the small end was struck to an intense flaming of the large end, which lasted for 40 seconds. Other types on large matches known as fusees were also used. DAIDs and Fusees were dangerous so were transported in this wooden box lined with foam cushioning. Wooden safety box lined with foam cushion Fuseesbushfire, forests commission victoria (fcv) -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
Wicker basket to transport seedlings
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)... Plantations Forests Commission Victoria (FCV) Large wicker basket used ...Seedlings were lifted from seedbeds in FCV nurseries, usually early in the morning, then packed to be transported by road or rail. The seedlings risked damage if they dried out. These baskets were used to transport and protect open-rooted pine seedlings. Thought be used at French Island in about 1920.Large wicker basket used to transport seedlings With metal locking mechanism and wicker handle Donated by FCV forester, Bert Semmensnurseries, plantations, forests commission victoria (fcv) -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
Fire hose nozzle(s) with Y joint and brass attachments
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)... Commission Victoria (FCV) Aluminum fire hose nozzle(s) with Y joint ...Hose nozzle size can affect the stream of water. A smaller hole puts out a longer stream but with less volume. A longer water stream is useful when trying to extinguish fire or sparks high in the tree tops. They were often used with high pressure pumps like the Pacific Marine.Aluminum fire hose nozzle(s) with Y joint and interchangeable brass attachments For 1.5 inch hose with screw attachments rather than modern twist-camm locks. The main nozzle is aluminum alloy and the interchangeable nozzles are made of brass.bushfire, fire pump, forests commission victoria (fcv) -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
Driptorch - hand held - unknown date, design or manufacturer
... Forests Commission Victoria (FCV)... Early driptorch design Bushfire Forests Commission Victoria (FCV ...The origins of the humble handheld driptorch have been lost in time. They are widely used for ignition in controlled burning operations in forest and grasslands. The date, origins and manufacturer of this particular model are unknown. The “Pacific Forester“ with its short central wand and somewhat leaky ball-valve was made by the American Wajax company in the 1940s. The Pacific Forester is slightly different in design from the more robust and common “Panama” driptorch first manufactured in 1933 and used extensively by Queensland cane farmers. The Panama is closely related to the current “Firebug” used in Victoria which is manufactured by Rodney Industries in Brisbane. The fuel is a mixture of petrol and diesel and every FCV District had their own closely-guarded secret formula ... 2:1, 3:1, 1:1, 4:1 or 3:2 ratio. There was also the choice of 91, 95 or 98 octane petrol mixed with summer or winter diesel. Occasionally some of the old Avgas or Jet-A1 lying around the depot was added with a splash of engine oil to make the mixture stick to the fuel to be ignited. The fuel mixed also varied between autumn or spring, heathland, mixed forest, or high-intensity slash burnsEarly driptorch designDrip torch with handle Wand has loop and valve. The loop is designed to assist with even flow of fuel which flows out onto the burning head of the wand. Soldered tin fuel container which holds burner mix. Gravitational feed of the driptorch allows the unit to drip fire, making it simple and quick to operate. bushfire, forests commission victoria (fcv)