A practical, spec-first approach to sourcing fire hose for municipal, industrial, and facility needs
This guide breaks down how to specify fire hose with fewer surprises—especially when coordinating multi-site purchasing across U.S. cities or managing export-ready documentation and logistics through a single source like IFW Supply.
1) Start with a complete fire hose specification (the 10-point checklist)
2) Diameter selection: match the hose to the job (not the habit)
Common field groupings include smaller attack hose (often in the 1.5”–2.5” range) and larger supply/LDH (often 4”–6”) for high-volume water delivery. Industry guidance commonly groups attack and supply hose this way, with LDH used for higher-volume operations. (firehunter.co)
Also note that standards and manufacturer-published dimensions matter. Recent consolidations in NFPA’s hose-related documents have emphasized clearer communication of diameters and manufacturer-published information to support better attack package design decisions. (knowyourhose.com)
3) Construction and materials: durability, weight, and environment
For buyers who need third-party confidence in performance claims, approvals can matter as much as construction. UL notes that UL 19 addresses lined fire hose and hose assemblies, including construction, marking, and testing considerations. (ul.com)
4) Couplings & compatibility: where “close enough” becomes a failure point
If you are sourcing for export or for U.S. projects with international contractors, explicitly call out the connection standard early. That one line item can prevent weeks of submittal rework.
5) Standards & approvals: what to ask for in submittals
Practical purchasing tip: ask vendors to provide documentation that clearly ties the exact hose assembly you’re buying (diameter, construction, coupling configuration) to any claimed listing or approval—especially if hose is being configured or assembled for your order.
Quick comparison table: common fire hose spec choices
| Spec Element | Typical Options | Best For | Common Pitfall |
|---|---|---|---|
| Diameter | Attack (often 1.5”–2.5”), Supply/LDH (often 4”–6”) | Matching flow needs vs. maneuverability | Choosing by habit, not hydraulics or environment |
| Construction | Single jacket, double jacket, covered | Balancing weight, abrasion resistance, lifecycle cost | Ignoring abrasion/UV/chemical exposure realities |
| Pressure rating | Working pressure + proof/burst expectations | Ensuring safe operation at required pump pressures | Assuming all “attack hose” is rated the same |
| Couplings | NH/NST, Storz, instantaneous; mixed-end assemblies | Interoperability across trucks, hydrants, manifolds | Thread mismatches discovered after delivery |
| Listings/approvals | UL 19 listing, project/AHJ requirements | Documented performance and compliance confidence | Not tying paperwork to the exact hose assembly |
6) Step-by-step: how procurement teams can tighten an RFQ for fire hose
Step 1: Confirm the use-case and constraints
Document whether the hose is for attack, supply, standpipe operations, industrial response, training, or washdown. Include temperature extremes, abrasive surfaces, UV exposure, or chemical contact that can shorten hose life.
Step 2: Lock in diameter, length, and storage method
Specify diameter and length per section and note how it will be stored (crosslay, hose bed, hose rack cabinet, reel). Storage can influence acceptable stiffness, weight, and coupling selection.
Step 3: Specify couplings and thread standard explicitly
Write it in plain language: “2.5” hose with 2.5” NH/NST couplings both ends” (or “Storz x Storz,” etc.). If any adapters are required, decide whether they are part of the hose assembly purchase or a separate line item.
Step 4: Require submittal documentation that matches the assembly
Ask for datasheets and any required listing/approval documents that correspond to the exact diameter/construction/coupling configuration you’re buying (not a “similar model”).
Step 5: Plan delivery and logistics early (especially for exports)
If hose will ship to multiple U.S. sites or internationally, align on packing, labeling, inspection needs, and required documentation up front so deliveries don’t stall in receiving or at the port.
Local angle: consistent hose specs across U.S. job sites (Boise and beyond)
A helpful approach is to create a “primary” hose assembly spec for most sites and a smaller “exception list” for locations that require different couplings or specialty hose for harsh environments. That keeps your inventory manageable while staying compatible where it counts.
IFW Supply supports buyers with fire protection equipment and related components, and can also help coordinate export-ready sourcing and documentation when projects extend beyond U.S. borders.
FAQ: Fire hose sourcing and specification
Include use-case, diameter, length, construction, working pressure, coupling type/size, thread standard, and any required listings/approvals. If exporting, add packing and documentation requirements.
Not necessarily. UL 19 is a specific safety standard for lined fire hose and hose assemblies, and UL discusses construction, marking, and testing expectations tied to that standard. (ul.com)
Coupling/thread mismatches—especially when different sites use different connection standards or when the RFQ doesn’t explicitly name coupling type, size, and thread standard.
Start with required flow and operational handling needs. Attack hose is typically selected for front-line deployment; supply/LDH is selected for higher-volume water delivery. (firehunter.co)
Yes. IFW Supply provides export sales support including specification analysis, cross-referencing, documentation, packing/crating, inspections, and shipping options. For planning, start with the Export Sales page and request a spec review.