Live Rescue: Continuous Car Fire (Season 2) | A&E

Stay up to date on all of A&E’s premieres at http://aetv.com/schedule.

A car rages with fire in this clip from “1.6.20”. #LiveRescue
Subscribe for more from Live Rescue and other great A&E shows:
http://aetv.us/subscribe-ae

Check out exclusive A&E content:
Website – http://www.aetv.com/
Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/AETV
Twitter – https://twitter.com/AETV

“Live Rescue” follows firefighters, paramedics and EMTs from across the country as they bravely put their lives on the line responding to emergency rescue calls. Emmy® Award-winner Matt Iseman joins “Live Rescue” with impressive media and medical credentials.

A&E leads the cultural conversation through high-quality, thought provoking original programming with a unique point of view. Whether it’s the network’s distinctive brand of award-winning disruptive reality or groundbreaking documentary, A&E makes entertainment an art form. Visit us at http://aetv.com for more info.

source

Author: avnblogfeed

ANGELHOUSE © 2009 - 2022 | HOSTING BY PHILLYFINEST369 SERVER STATS| & THE IDIOTS ROBOT AND CONTROL INC. |(RSS FEED MODULE)| ALL YOUTUBE VIDEOS IS A REGISTERED TRADEMARK OF GOOGLE INC. THE YOUTUBE CHANNELS AND BLOG FEEDS IS MANAGED BY THERE RIGHTFUL OWNERS (AVNBLOGFEED.COM)

44 thoughts on “Live Rescue: Continuous Car Fire (Season 2) | A&E

  1. Nice job guys keep it up 🚒🧑‍🚒🇺🇸

  2. 💁🏻‍♀️Why are they making cars from materials that make them more flammable ??? that seems unsafe to me

  3. Please Block A&E due their knee jerk reactions with Live PD — I'm doing it right after this post. Pretty simple – hit the About tab and then select the flag on the right and choose block user.

  4. Yeah, Magnesium. It's strong, it's light-weight for how strong it is…and unfortunately when it does start on fire, it's REALLY difficult to put out. Naval Aircraft that caught fire were dumped over the side of the ship so the ship (and the sailors) would not be damaged. But even after getting dunked, the planes would continue to burn while under the water, fully enveloped in the ocean. Burns funny colors, too.

  5. You'd think a fire chief in a large city would know to use dry chem on a magnesium fire especially when the is liquid fuels involved. Probably took one of the lowest on the totem pole to finally think to use their dry chem.

  6. So you're posting on YouTube, but you pulled every Live* product from your streaming app? Yeah, that makes sense…
    Sigh, keep 'em coming.

Comments are closed.