Design that drives forest fire control gear—cost, safety, appearance, and efficiency all work together to shape the tools you rely on in the field.
This issue of Fire Control Notes surveys how thoughtful design can improve performance, lower costs, and keep crews safe while meeting real-world needs.
The featured article explains how equipment development blends research, design, manufacturing, and testing. It emphasizes that good design must balance cost with quality, safety, and operational efficiency. A practical example showcases a hydraulically controlled plow redesign: one casting replaces 34 separate parts, cutting raw material cost, speeding production, and boosting overall efficiency while preserving safety features. The result is a more reliable tool that looks and works better for on-the-ground fire control work.
- Understand how cost, appearance, safety, and efficiency influence product design.
- See how a single casting can streamline manufacturing and improve performance.
- Learn why safety considerations are a central part of every design decision.
- Get a glimpse of how equipment design fits into broader fire control goals and field operations.
Ideal for readers involved in forest fire management, equipment development, or field operations looking for practical design insight.
This edition provides practical perspectives on how better design supports effective fire prevention and suppression work in the woods.