The New Zealand Fire Service operated around 850 fire appliances, including conventional pumping appliances and specialist appliances, and 330 support vehicles. Fire appliances were given a three- or four-digit number for identification; the first two digits specify the appliance's resident station (numbers may be repeated between areas), while the last one or two digits specify its function. An example being "Newlands 291" – 29 indicated the appliance is resident at
Newlands fire station in Wellington, and 1 indicates its function is a pump. These conventions carried through to the successor organisation, Fire and Emergency New Zealand.
Pumping appliances The basic appliance in service with NZFS was the Pump Tender, which is primarily equipped for fires. Typical equipment included a pump (normally driven off the appliance engine via a power take-off); a high pressure hose reel for small fires and initial attack; a supply of high-pressure and low-pressure hoses for larger fires;
fire-fighting foam; a standpipe and bar for accessing fire hydrants, and suction hoses for accessing non-reticulated water supplies; forcible entry tools such as
Halligan bars, axes and sledgehammers; aluminium and wooden ladders; and a first aid kit with an
automated external defibrillator. The two major variations on the Pump Tender were the Pump Aerial Tender and the Pump Rescue Tender. The Pump Aerial Tender had an additional aerial ladder and monitor for high-rise and aerial attacks. The Pump Rescue Tender, in addition to firefighting equipment, carried extra equipment primarily for motor vehicle accidents and
vehicle extrication. Typical equipment included
hydraulic rescue tools (aka "The Jaws of Life"), vehicle stabilisation equipment, and winches. Most new pumping appliances for the New Zealand Fire Service up until the transition to Fire and Emergency New Zealand, were manufactured by the Fraser Engineering Group in
Lower Hutt, and based on
Iveco,
Scania and finally
MAN chassis. Other manufacturers and chassis including Hino, Dennis, Mitsubishi/Fuso, International, Dodge, Bedford and Mack had been used in the past. There were four sizes of pumping appliances, named Type 1 through Type 5: • The Type 1 "Light" appliance was used in both urban and rural areas. It had a rear-mounted 1900 L/min pump with one low-pressure hose reel, a 2000 L onboard water tank, and around 5.2 m2 of locker space. The latest appliances were typically built on Iveco Eurocargo chassis. • The Type 2 "Medium" appliance was used in both urban and rural areas. It had the same features as the Type 1, but had an additional high-pressure hose reel and around 1.3 m2 extra locker space. The latest appliances were typically built on Iveco Eurocargo chassis. • The Type 3 "Heavy" appliance was used in urban areas. It had a mid-mounted 3800 L/min pump with two high-pressure hose reels, and a 1400 L onboard water tank. As of 2015, new appliances were typically built on
MAN TGM chassis; prior to this they were typically built on
Scania P-series chassis. • The Type 4 "Heavy Aerial" or "Bronto" appliance was used in urban areas. It had the same features as the Type 3, but was also fitted with a 17-metre aerial ladder and monitor. The latest appliances were typically built on Scania P-series chassis. • The Type 5 & 6 "Heavy Aerial" or "Bronto" appliance was used in urban/city areas. It had the same features as the Type 4, but was fitted with a 32-metre aerial ladder and monitor, instead of a 17-metre. Some of the larger aerial appliances did not have their own integrated pumps, and required support from a Type 3 'base pump' to provide water for firefighting. Under NZFS (and subsequently within FENZ), Pump Tender identification numbers ends in 1, 2 or 3 (e.g. Onehunga 221, Manurewa 301, Hastings 561); Pump Aerial Tender identification numbers end in 4, 5 or 6 (e.g. Ellerslie 274, Auckland 205, Parnell 256); and Pump Rescue Tender (PRT) identification numbers end in 7 (e.g. Auckland 207, Papatoetoe 347, Christchurch 217)
Specialist appliances Career staff appliances may also carry more specialised items used for industrial rescue, light USAR and high-angle line rescue. In some areas, these are carried on separate Rescue or Emergency Tenders which do not have pumping capabilities. Additional specialist appliances are usually strategically located in each fire district. Typical appliances, their functions and identification numbers are as follows: • Hydraulic elevating platforms with aerial monitor ("Snorkel") – non-pumping, typically long (callsign suffix: 5) • Turntable ladders – non-pumping, typically long. (6) •
Technical (Heavy) Rescue Tender – Auckland Fire District only (8) • Water tankers, to assist in water supply at properties or in areas without a reticulated supply (11) • Hoselayers (12) • Breathing Apparatus Tenders, to supply extra
breathing apparatus cylinders and mobile cylinder refilling at major incidents (15) • Command vehicles, to act as a mobile communications centre and incident control point at major incidents (14 or 18) • Hazardous Materials Response (Hazmat) (16 or 18) • Operational Support Vehicles (26, 29) • Lighting & Power Generation Units (usual callsign suffix: 19) • Fire Medical Vehicle (FMV) – prototype combination pump tender and medical first response vehicle. ==Communications==