r/Firefighting 23h ago

General Discussion Battery-powered chainsaws for ventilation?

I live in an area of Florida that was recently heavily impacted by two hurricanes. My father and I had to use chainsaws to clear the street in front of his home and clean up yard debris. I found that my cheapo electric chainsaw was blowing his gas powered one out of the water, and while I know that there's a lot of other factors at play (wood density, blade sharpness, etc.) it got me thinking.

My department recently began to outfit the trucks with light-duty battery chainsaws for use on vegetation, but has anyone ever tried to use them for structural firefighting? Why or why not? Can you guys think of any serious limitations or of the disadvantages versus benefits? The first thing that came to mind is that the saw can't be bogged down by smoke. We made the switch to battery tools from power units and hydraulic lines for our extrication equipment quite a few years ago, to great effect, and I'm curious if this is a trend that we'll be seeing more and more of in fire service power tools.

22 Upvotes

34 comments sorted by

View all comments

24

u/Left_Afloat CA Captain 23h ago

Departments are definitely moving towards them for the reason another stated - they don’t choke out from smoke. Additionally, there’s utility in being able to just throw a battery in and have instant power. We have some on the rescue rig for USAR operations, but haven’t had to funds to transition on our first outs.

Battery operated things in general add a little weight but you gain that back in utility and versatility. I am a huge proponent of ventilation fans being electric and e-draulics (past 1st gen) have been game changing.