Choice of detector and detector positioning Flashcards
It is essential when choosing a fire detection system
that the designer selects a system best suited to
the needs of the building. The final choice will
depend on:
(i) The speed of response required to satisfy the
fire safety objective, which might be life
safety or property protection or both.
(ii) The need to minimise false alarms from the
system.
(iii) The nature of the fire hazard.
(iv) The form of evacuation strategy to be
employed in a building, e.g. single or staged
General points re heat detectors
- less sensitive to fires in their early
stages - suitable in areas where smoke or fumes could create false alarms.
- not suitable for protecting areas where a warning of smoke is crucial, e.g. escape routes.
General points re ionisation smoke detectors
- good at small particles found in clean burning
fires - less sensitive to larger
particles such as those generated by a smoldering
fire.
general points re optical smoke detectors
- better at detecting large particles
- less sensitive to clean burning fires producing little visible smoke
- light scatter principle are more sensitive than those using smoke obscuration.
general points re beam detectors
- Beam detectors are both economical and efficient in large undivided areas, such as cathedrals or large concert halls
- they must be mounted onto a rigid structure that is unlikely to distort or move by wind or load etc
general points re infra red and ultra violet flame detectors
1, Infra-red and ultra-violet detection is suitable
where flaming fires can be expected.
2. inability of ultra-violet detectors to penetrate
smoke should be noted
Aspirating systems are useful where
n Highly sensitive equipment, such as computers,
are housed in enclosed cabinets.
n Aesthetics preclude the use of point detectors
but where holes for small diameter capillary
tubes are acceptable.
n Areas where the environment is unsuitable
for point detectors, e.g. cold rooms and
where sampling tubes can be connected to
monitors outside of the cold area.
general points re gas detectors
- Carbon monoxide detectors may be immune to
influences such as tobacco, dust or steam that
could result in false alarms if conventional smoke
detectors are used - They react faster than if heat
detectors were used as an alternative to smoke in
those circumstances.
In areas with flat ceilings, the horizontal distance
between any point and a detector should not
exceed
n 7.5m for smoke detectors
n 5.3m for heat detectors