Last week’s posting HERE about different colors for fire apparatus mentioned area departments that have apparatus that is not red (or red & white or red & black). Several departments have switched from other colors to red, and several readers pointed out that some still have rigs with the old colors.
This is the first in a series of postings that will highlight the departments that have switched or might have had a unit in the past that was a different color than the rest of the fleet.
Arlington Heights once purchased a Mack CF engine that was a demo and came white over lime green.
Elk Grove Village had a lime green Mack CF engine.
Mt. Prospect used to paint their fleet white over yellow. Over the years, this included at least five engines and two mid-ship mounted aerials.
Palatine had a white over lime green Seagrave engine.
Rolling Meadows had two units that were white over lime green. In addition to this Pierce, they had a medium-duty squad with a PTO pump built by E-ONE on a GMC chassis.
Wheeling apparatus used to be white over lime green. From the late 1960s when Ward LaFrance pioneered the push to painting apparatus lime green through the purchase of the 1994 Sutphen tower ladder that is currently being used, all Wheeling units had this color scheme.
And here’s one last image to show the Palm Beach Gardens green that was referred to in the article from the Wall Street Journal.
#1 by Drew Smith on April 18, 2012 - 9:02 PM
The second Wheeling WLF had two large reels for woven jacketed 4-inch hose with threaded couplings. I think the reels were PTO driven.
#2 by Ryan on April 18, 2012 - 8:45 PM
York Center Fire Prot Dist had all white over lime green apparatus up until a few years ago, when they bought a new engine and tanker that were red and repainted everything else to match. Elmhurst is slowly switching to white over red from their yellow/orangish color.
#3 by Dan on April 18, 2012 - 2:33 PM
Hanover Park still runs a 1988? Spartan Squad that is white over lime / yellow. I think it might just be the designated HazMat unit these days though.