Posts Tagged Hero Pipe

Chicago FF files lawsuit against Elkhart Brass

Excerpts from The Elkharttruth.com

A Chicago firefighter is suing Elkhart Brass and two of its executives, alleging the firefighting equipment maker has violated their contract to make, market, and sell a device he invented to fight high-rise fires, and is trying to claim it invented the device.

The HERO (High-rise Emergency Response Offensive) Pipe mounts to the window sill or floor below a fire that breaks out above the 12th floor, which is too high to reach with water from a ladder truck, and extends a telescoping arm upward, delivering water to the floor above.

The suit states that Michael Wielgat, now a captain, conceived the idea in 2004 after battling a fire at Chicago’s 45-story LaSalle Bank building that trapped dozens of people above the 29th floor for hours as firefighters struggled for access.

In 2007, the U.S. Patent Office published Wielgat’s patent. In 2010, after years of building and testing prototypes with the Chicago and New York fire departments, the FDNY asked that the HERO Pipe be fitted with a remote control or movable monitor to better direct the water spray from side to side, the suit states. Wielgat asked Elkhart Brass to loan him such a monitor, and the tests using it proved successful, prompting the FDNY to order four HERO Pipes.

Wielgat formed Hero Systems Inc. in April 2010 and sometime late that year, Elkhart Brass chief operating officer Don Sjolin approached him with an offer to manufacture the product, projecting sales that would top $1 million in the first year and grow exponentially thereafter, the suit alleges. In April 2011, the parties entered into a license and manufacturing agreement.

But a month before that agreement was signed, unbeknownst to Wielgat, Elkhart Brass, having received Wielgat’s drawings and engineering analysis for the HERO Pipe, filed patent applications in the United States and China for the HERO Pipe in its own name, identifying Elkhart Brass employees Steve Bollinger, Curt McDowell and Bruce Behenna as the inventors, the suit alleges.

The suit accuses defendants Elkhart Brass, Sjolin and president/CEO Hans Ashbaugh in scheming to fail in their efforts to sell or market the HERO Pipe, eventually terminate the agreement, “feigning an inability” to sell the device, and once the agreement was terminated, start marketing and selling it as its own invention. Their agreement with Wielgat effectively ended in December when Elkhart Brass stopped paying him for expenses, the suit states.

Hero Systems Inc.’s suit was filed Friday, Jan. 9, in the northern Indiana U.S. District Court in South Bend.

thanks Dan

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Chicago fire captain invents tool for high-rise fires

This from Chicagofirewire.com:

The Chicago Fire Department’s newest tool to battle high-rise fires was invented by one of its own, Capt. Michael Wielgat.

The 26-year veteran of the department has on his own time over the last eight years developed the device, a remote-controlled, periscopelike pipe that can extinguish high-rise fires from the floor below by spraying up to 625 gallons per minute through a window. He calls it the “Hero Pipe.”

“As the years went on, I kept investing more and more, and at one point I was so deep into it I just couldn’t stop,” said Wielgat, 49, from a bedroom inside the Near West Side fire station that he commands.

So far, Chicago has bought one pipe and New York has bought four. Both departments have deployed the devices this year.

And this month, Wielgat and a representative from the company that manufactures the pipe, Elkhart Brass, are traveling to Israel later this month. The country wants a closer look. “We were fortunate that they stumbled across this,” said Eric Combs, Elkhart Brass’s director of marketing.

Although the Hero Pipe is only designed for high-rise fires, “there’s no product like [it],” Combs said. “This is insurance against that potentially extremely devastating fire.” Wielgat said officials in Beijing, Shanghai, Dubai and Mumbai, India, also have shown interest.

He said he first came up with the idea after witnessing as a firefighter the deadly 2003 fire in a Cook County office building at 69 W. Washington St. Then, about a year later, he saw another high-rise fire rip through the 29th floor of the LaSalle Bank building in the Loop.

The flames were out of reach of the department’s ladder trucks, and he said firefighters had a hard time controlling the dangerous blazes in close quarters from inside the buildings. So he started tinkering in his garage and built a prototype — then another, and another. The single father of three children took out a second mortgage on his Beverly home to keep the project going.

“I honestly thought the project would be a six- or eight-month project, and I’d be done,” he said. “It ended up being an eight-year process.” He said he hasn’t seen a return on his investment yet, but is hopeful he will soon because of  the device’s potential to save lives and property.

During the LaSalle Bank building fire, he said, flames gradually shot out of more and more windows “until there was about eight windows burning.” He said the fire that burned for 3½ hours “would have been out in the first 30 minutes” with the Hero Pipe.

Chicago Fire Department Lt. Ted Kramer said Wielgat’s invention is known throughout the department’s ranks. “It gives us definitely a sense of pride that one of our own is able to do that,” said the 38-year-old, who met Wielgat on his first assignment 17 years ago. “It’s a tool that we can really stand behind because it’s not some engineer in a lab that’s creating this. It’s a fireman who has real field experience.”

New York’s firefighters know of it as well. “I’ve been in the fire department for over 20 years,” said Capt. Mark Driscoll, who trains New York firefighters. “Guys have ideas all the time, [but] it’s very rare a guy takes his idea and an actual tool comes out of it.”

But the $50,000 device is a tough sell to cash-strapped cities.

Chicago has its one Hero Pipe placed with the city’s other high-rise firefighting gear at Wielgat’s station. The gear is sent to every confirmed high-rise fire.

A lot of attention was brought to high-rise fire safety this year when Illinois Fire Marshal Larry Matkaitis proposed refitting every high-rise building in the city with costly fire sprinklers. He quickly backed down from his proposal at the urging of high-rise dwellers and politicians.

“Most fires in high-rises, if you close the door, will burn themselves out,” said Mark Nielsen, the Chicago Fire Department’s assistant deputy fire commissioner, at a safety meeting with Ald. Harry Osterman (48th) and condo owners in October. But when a door is left open, and wind fuels the fire from an open window, the fire could spread to hallways, he said.

He said neither New York nor Chicago has used the Hero Pipe on a fire outside of testing and training. “I know one day it’s going to put out a really bad fire, and that’s going to be the happiest day of my life — ’cause I’m really going to see it doing its job and protecting firemen and saving lives,” he said.

thanks Dan

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