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Vehicles & Equipment

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Vehicles

Area Car

Main article: Area Car
The Sun Hill Area Car, as seen in "The Bill".

These are saloons like the BMW 5 series or large hatchbacks like the Vauxhall Vectra. They also appear to be mostly manual transmission. Often can be heard screetching to a start when chasing anyone, or in a hurry in general. The call sign for the Area Car is Sierra One.The Area Car is a Police Stations fast response car. It handles urgent 999 calls and car chases as well as providing assistance to other officers. Currently Tony Stamp, Roger Valentine, Will Fletcher (currently a TDC with CID) is qualified to drive the area car. The current area car is the BMW 5 Series. Past area cars were the Ford Mondeo, Ford Sierra, Rover SD1 and the Vauxhall Vectra. The Sierra was first seen on The Bill in the early '90s, the Mondeo: 1996 and the Vectra: 1997.

IRV

Main article: IRV
The Sun Hill IRV, as seen in "The Bill".
IRV stand for Incident Response Vehicle which are now dispatched by IBO. When the area car is dealing with a crime or is not near enough to deal with the reported crime, the Incident Response Vehicle is a level below the Area Car. It's slower than the Area Car, but a lot faster than the Pandas. It can handle emergency calls, assist the Area Car and do general Police stuff.Current IRV's at Sun Hill are Two Ford Focus MkI and One Vauxhall Astra MkIV

Panda

Main article: Panda Cars
This is one of The Bill old Panda cars

The phrase panda car refers to a small or medium-sized police car operated by British police forces. They are used for ordinary patrol work, with larger and more powerful vehicles being used for emergency response, traffic patrol and special services. The current Panda Car is the Vauxhall Astra MkIV

Vans

Main article: Police Vans
The Sun Hill Vans, as seen in "The Bill".
Sun Hill has three vans. One for personnel transportation, with a cage at the back for prisoners, and two more solely for personnel transportation without a cage.Current vans are two Ford Transit Minibuses, One Leyland DAF 400 Series and a Mercedes Sprinter MWB

ARV: Armed Response Vehicle

Main article: ARV

ARV (Armed Response Vehicle)

Crime Car

Main article: Crime Car
The Sun Hill Crime Car, as seen in "The Bill".

Helicopters

Main article: Police Helicopters
The Metropolitan Police Airborne Unit, as seen in "The Bill".
India 97/99 is the Metropolitan Police Airborne Unit. India 97/99 is called in for searches, major operations, to assist in a chase, or, sometimes to check out large disturbances that Sun Hill cannot reach quickly. It comes with all the standard Police Helicopter gear: Cameras, Infrared Cameras and a big spotlight.

In 2002 during the Sun Hill Race Riots, Thames Television made up India 91 opposed to 97/99 as they only were starting off from the beggining


See Helicopter in action India 97/99

Equipment

Batons & ASPs

Main article: Batons & ASPs
This is the same type of Baton used in The Bill

The ASP telescopic steel baton used by both uniform and CID. Compact but strong, it is used for self defense and for controlling offenders. The ASP acts as a shock device when an offender is struck. Replaced the acrylic and wooden batons in the mid-1990s.


CS Spray

Main article: CS Spray
Two officers using CS Spray

Introduced into service in 1998, during the Police uniform reform, CS is a non-lethal spray which incapacitates offenders. Normally sprayed onto the face and causes major discomfort to the eyes.

Cuffs

Main article: Cuffs
Here are some Quick-Cuffs made by Hiatts

Quick-cuffs are used for restraining uncooperative offenders. Handcuffs with solid metal connector instead of a chain. The cuffs can be put on quicker during an arrest, making it slightly more difficult to resist being cuffed. With the use of quick-cuffs, offenders easier to control in that the more a suspect struggles, the more discomfort is felt.

Vests & Jackets

Main article: Vests & Jackets

The heavy blue flak jacket or bullet-proof vest provides limited protection to the wearer in situations where firearms are involved. Most familiarly worn by officers from the force firearms unit, CO19. Police markings on the front and back of the flak jacket ensure the wearer is identified as a police officer. Velcro-strips keep the garment on the wearer.

The Metvest is a stab-proof and ballistic-proof vest. It is normally worn under officers' clothing to provide protection against serious injury.

The fluroscent yellow-green luminous jacket or glow-vest is permanently worn by traffic officers. It is worn by divisional officers for traffic duty, at scenes of traffic accidents, at night, during public events and during searches. Fluroscent yellow-green has been specifically chosen because of its high visibility to the human eye.

The stab vests have a Velcro strip, above the Metropolitan Police Badge, is to hold the Met name badges, in use since late 2004.

Personal Radios

Main article: Personal Radios

The Personal Radio or PR is a two-way radio used for police communication. Up until 2006 the Metropolitan police force used analogue radios, controlled from CAD. In 2007 they changed over to the digital system, now controlled from BIU or Integrated Borough Operations. The panic button can be activated when an officer requires urgent assistance. Radio banter can be heard at all times. The PR clips onto shirts, jumpers, tunics, belts or wherever the officer chooses. The Met's radio sets are made by telecommunications giant Motorola. The MTH800 uses the Klickfast Carrying System

Pocket Book

Main article: Pocket Book

An officer's pocket book is used for recording incidents on scene, when witnesses give their version of events or just for situtation reports. The pocket book can be referred to when an officer gives evidence in court.

Torch

Main article: Torch

Sometimes forgotten as an important piece of equipment, the torch provides an officer with light in dark places. It is especially handy during searches and during the night shift.

Kits

Main article: Kits

The Personal Protection Kit or PPK consists of white ASP rubber gloves, It is used in situations involving injured persons, looking for bits shatted glass and bits of blood, and chasing supspects when police are the first on scene.

Warrant Card

Main article: Warrant Card

A warrant card is a proof of identification and authority carried by police officers. The term is normally used only in the United Kingdom this gives the officer the right to exercise his/her powers of arrest.