Possible vehicle fire on northbound Highway 1 near Upper Laguna, Davenport CA


A possible vehicle fire was reported on northbound Highway 1 near Upper Laguna Road in Davenport. Fire units were dispatched but no further details about the vehicle are available at this time.
Audio|Source: CalFire CZU - Dispatch, Command, Air Attack, Air to Ground
03:10
Transcript:
00:00
Station 33 possible vehicle fire in the area of Highway 1 on McGuna Road, Davenport.
00:27
Battalion 1712, Engine 1773, Engine 1793, possible vehicle fire in the area of northbound Highway 1, north of Upper Laguna, Davenport.
00:40
Respondal and Local at (number withheld).
00:58
Publure 13 for 1817-1917-190-190.177.
01:03
...pocally equal by a Tand-1.190.9.
01:06
...uproletters.
01:07
...upon the 4365.
01:08
...on the 436.
01:14
... ... ...
01:15
...
01:26
Felton Pino and Tone 9 for engine 1793 and company 37 possible vehicle fire in the area of northbound Highway 1 in Upper Liguna Road, Davenport.
01:35
Respond on local at (number withheld).
01:43
Felton engine 31113, go 3 to possible vehicle fire Highway 1.
01:53
Engine 3113, I copy you in route at (number withheld).
01:58
Phone dispatch battalion 3103, same traffic.
02:07
The client 3103, engine 3113, you're responding with the time 1712, engine 1773, engine 1793, and engine 1793, to the vehicle overheating, possibly catching fire.
02:20
No further details on the vehicle description at this time.
02:23
First unit, seen as Laguna IC[1], VFIRE 22 for TACA at (number withheld).
02:32
Hello, this one headback on film 13 for 1517.
02:36
You can turn the call to poppy in the area, highway one, and ciphering 1192.
02:46
1793, responding.
02:51
So you're responding to a single part of a staple over the next to me on the tire.
02:58
There's stuff on the vehicle.
03:00
H-T and education has been both notified.
03:03
These are announced, as of now, for the person as you know sooner, I see on the fire point of two.
03:09
I have four years.
Police codes explained
The following codes appeared in the transcript and are explained below:
[1]
IC: Incident Command/Incident Commander in charge of the scene
Disclaimer:
This transcript was automatically generated and may contain inaccuracies. Please verify the information independently.