



Putting Research Into Practice
The idea for the innovative Hose Stream Prop was sparked when FSRI research studies began to yield thought-provoking findings around the fundamentals of hose stream mechanics – specifically air entrainment and water mapping. These concepts are the ground-level building blocks needed to understand the impact of varying suppression tactics on the fireground. From these findings, FSRI research engineers began by building a prototype training prop to visualize and interactively demonstrate these concepts.
With the help of trusted fire service partners and live training demonstrations throughout the country, FSRI research engineers designed several enhancements to optimize usability, increase the suppression concepts able to be visualized with the prop and much trial and error – leading up to the final version and current construction plans.
FSRI is now proud to share these plans along with instructional videos and lesson plans for fire departments to incorporate into their training protocols. Materials lists, construction plans, training videos and lesson plans – everything instructors need to build the prop and train firefighters is provided here in a comprehensive hands-on training toolkit.

BUILD YOUR OWN HOSE STREAM PROP
Download everything you need to build your own Hose Stream Prop, from materials lists and building plans to recommended builder's tips.
DOWNLOADS
- Construction plans (4.3MB pdf)
- Materials list (187KB pdf)
- Builder's tips (184KB pdf)
- Entire construction toolkit (4.5MB pdf)
Training Lessons

Fire Lieutenant (ret.)
Fire Department of New York
“This Hose Stream Prop is a gift to the fire service born out of field experience and research. My hope is that this prop becomes part of every firefighter academy curriculum.
The importance of stream placement and its effect on the fire is a ‘must learn’ for firefighters.”

“The Hose Stream Prop and training developed by FSRI is next level. We originally started with a 16' hallway made of plywood that was a valuable training tool. With the creative minds at FSRI we now have a hallway, bedroom, attic and cockloft that takes the learning and teaching ability to the next level. When students see the impact of the streams angle and how water truly flows, it really connects the dots in terms of water mapping and air entrainment. We will be building them for each of our training centers."

Battalion Chief
Escambia County, FL, Fire Rescue
“I can’t emphasize enough how phenomenal the Hose Stream Prop really is. We used it to educate over 600 firefighters on proper water application methods at the 2021 Water on the Fire Conference.
Thank you to UL’s Fire Safety Research Institute for providing us with the tools and props needed to train tomorrow’s firefighters to be more efficient in suppression operations on the fireground.”
Explore these evidence-based considerations and access the related training courses with real world applications for suppression tactics on the fireground.