Smoke Signals 4 JULY 15, 2001 11 V!VHJJ ffiyfilbe Wfiflll Save ILnves New hand-held rescue tool could change emergency services forever. tig Continued from front page an accident is called the Sabre-Tool. The Sabre-Tool is like the Jaws of' Life, but this tool is more compact, cheaper and self-contained. The Tribe has begun manufactur ing this new technology at the Tribe's Grand Ronde Industries (GRI) plant in Tangent near Corvallis. The only tool out there that can tear through the steel cage of a car and just keep going. The steel-eating Sabre-Tool also has a computer inside of its body. "The computer senses how much pressure the tool needs to cut through whatever it's cuttirig," said Rasmussen. "It then sends it back to the motor controller, the motor speeds up or slows down, depending on what it needs. "What that has done is allowed us to get two hours on a battery, which is unheard of in this type of extrica tion equipment," said Rasmussen. "It only uses the energy it needs, when it needs it. That (the computer sys tem) was the breakthrough that al lowed us to make things happen." The body of the system is also fully enclosed, so there is no spark. "We are in the process in getting certification to use it in explosive en vironments," said Rasmussen. "Right now if you have a vehicle and there is gas everywhere, they use a little hand pump to run the tool, this tool (the Sabre-Tool) will make that old system obsolete and allow you to extricate in hazardous fuel environ- ) ft 7 1 X y I I L rmmm,,4'W f i. . f m j r A Ss - : v. : , V.T- ments much quicker." The other place this tool is spectacu lar is in enclosed spaces. "If you have a worker trapped in a tight space that is closed, our tool pro duces no gas and no fumes and no exhaust so we are able to rescue someone (without asphyxiating them)," said Rasmussen. "Before you would have to go in and use some tool that is inadequate for what you are doing." The Sabre-Tool also has another distinct advantage over the competition- it runs on batteries. "The batteries will recharge to 93 percent (capacity) in 15 minutes," said Rasmussen. "With two batter ies, you can cut constantly you never run out of power. You can also attach this to your vehicle battery and run it right off the vehicle." All the ideas that led to the formu lation of the Sabre-Tool happened at their conference room the green picnic table. "Up front (Sabre-Tool warehouse) is our engineer's office," said Rasmussen. "That is our conference room. The green table is where ideas we have came up with are hashed out, thought and worked over." Rasmussen and his staff also work on finding funding for towns that cannot afford the Sabre-Tool. "We are working very hard to work with foundations, work with federal agencies, anyone that we find that 4 . ;i. . Wv .- n ' Photos by Justin Phillips You Can Carry It-The portable hand-held Sabre-Tool is the next step in emergency rescue equipment because it can be brought to the scene of an acci dent in a backpack carried by firefighters or emergency personnel. The tool cuts through metal with ease and lessens the time of extrication of people trapped in their cars after an accident. could provide funding for rural fire departments that don't have the money to purchase the Sabre-Tool," said Rasmussen. They came up with the idea to go to the businesses that are key in the community that need the equipment and talk to them about helping with the funding of purchases. To make the idea of purchasing tool more attractive to potential spon sors, Rasmussen said they (potential sponsors) could have their business logo engraved on the cylinder of the Sabre-Tool. "We can take any logo from any company, scan it and etch it right on the face of the tool," said Rasmussen. Also in the mix, an exclusive hand held palm computer that will have an index of every vehicle made to show where to cut on any vehicle for best results. "When you extricate old cars, there are no air bags," said Rasmussen. "But in the new ones you have them. They are very, very dangerous. What we found is two books on ev ery make and model of the car. We have access to a person who was one of the original programmers from Palm (Pilot) and he agreed to put ev erything on the Palm Pilot." For example, if a fireman is on the way to a wreck and knows one of the cars involved is a Honda, all they have to do is enter the make and model into the hand-held computer. "It will show all the different parts and it has the ability to zoom in on where all the airbags are," said Rasmussen. Gene Hill, Chief Executive Officer and president of the Spirit Mountain Development Corporation is very excited about the Sabre-Tool. "For us giving back to the commu nity, this is just fantastic," said Gene Hill. "This is just spectacular in both job creations and other areas." My Turn Spirit Mountain Development Corporation's (SMDC) Chief Financial Officer Brian Grant takes his turn with the Sabre Tool. SMDC is developing the tool as a commercial enterprise, but will donate some equipment to local emergency services organizations.