C812 JGB
Scania G92M Turntable Ladder
In 1906 Glasgow Fire Brigade was the first service in Britain to order a mechanically operated Extension Ladder mounted on a turntable on a Mercedes chassis. The Turntable Ladder had arrived. Such was its success that every fire service in the U.K. eventually operated this type of appliance. The three main manufacturers of Turntable Ladders were Merryweather of Greenwich, London and the German firms of Magirus and Metz
C812 JGB was the first Scania fire appliance ordered by Strathclyde Fire Brigade, serving initially at Kilmarnock and was later transferred to Clydebank Fire Station.
The ladder set is a hydraulically operated and German engineered Metz DL30 four section steel 100’ (30m) extension ladder which also has the facility to enable a two man cage to be fitted to the top section of the ladder.
This appliance was the last operational Turntable Ladder in service with Strathclyde Fire and Rescue.
In the early hours of Sunday 18th June 2006 the T.L was turned out to a dwelling house fire in the Drumchapel area of Glasgow. The following day the appliance was taken off the run due to a faulty hydraulic valve. The costs of repairs combined with the imminent arrival of the new Aerial Rescue Pump prompted the decision to retire the appliance.
It is indeed fitting that exactly 100 years after the first turntable ladder was delivered to the Glasgow Fire Brigade, Strathclyde Fire and Rescue’s last operational Turntable Ladder would attend its final fire within the City of Glasgow.
The Turntable Ladder was gifted to Strathclyde Fire Brigade Preservation Group in July 2006.
