Continuity mistake: When they are lying in on Jack's 1st fire, they stop at the hydrant, and the one guy pulls LDH off the truck with an attached hydrant valve...when he is hooking the hydrant valve up to the hydrant, the hose is no longer attached to it. (00:18:55)
Continuity mistake: When John Travolta and his men are trying to enter the burning house after the troubled firefighter, he goes from having gloves on to not then back to wearing gloves. (00:47:00 - 00:47:35)
Continuity mistake: In the scene where Jack and Lenny are arguing about Dennis's death, the cup on the table gets knocked over. The next shot, the cup is standing up. The next shot, it's down again.
Continuity mistake: In the scene where Jack rescues the worker from the warehouse, while lowering the victim - the rope is wrapped around the beam - but in the overhead shot as the floor gives way - the rope is only laying across the beam.
Continuity mistake: At the bar when Linda first meets the rest of the firemen, the amount of liquid in the glass is not consistent. The level of the liquid keeps rising and lowering, even though she is drinking it.
Continuity mistake: In the rope rescue scene, when they first arrive, the snorkel is nosed into the tiller truck right below the action. Then it disappears, then reappears in one of the final shots of that scene.
Continuity mistake: In the scene where the floor collapses at the grain facility, Jack's helmet comes off as he is falling, but in the next shot it appears back on his head for a split second as he continues to fall.
Continuity mistake: During the response to the apartment fire in the snow, one of the responding shots is of a new pumper and a fully enclosed new tiller truck, instead of the actual units which are quite a bit older.
Continuity mistake: When Jack is lowering the worker out of the warehouse, the number of carabiners on the rope goes from one to two then back to one in the various shots.
Continuity mistake: In the scene at the abandoned building where the firefighter falls through the roof, when they rip the plywood off the door, you can see the whole piece of wood fall. But when the shot goes back to Jack as he opens the hose line, the plywood looks like it snapped in half and is still in the doorway.
Answer: I'm not a fire fighter so I do not have a answer based on experience but I assume that when Jack was disoriented it's because there was no light in the building, then when the fire broke through it produced enough light to break through the smoke and make seeing easier for him to escape.
It actually doesn't break through the floor...it's a flashover where everything including the gases in the smoke reach their ignition temperature simultaneously and the room lights off...it's a very serious and dangerous situation to be in as a firefighter...I was in one, luckily we were only 10 feet inside the door.
Steve Kozak