Hi All,
Just had a discussion with one of the local fire officers in our area regarding one of the hotels we look after.
He told me that when we service fire alarms in any buildings, they have to be unto the current design standard or they fail the inspection. The hotel alarm was installed by a bunch of cowboys a few years back, (previous owners choice) and parts of it were wired in LSF T&E. I mentioned this to the inspector 2 years ago, and he assumed it was ok as we did not design it, as long as any additional points were installed to current standards.
Does this mean that when testing buildings we are to fail them if a detector wired 40 years ago is too close to a light fitting? Or the cables installed 20 years ago do not comply to current standards? Or there are not enough detectors to make it a current L2 system or what is advised in BS5839 P1?
The reason I am asking is because I thought when testing we are responsible for checking the current fire alarm system works and we can only advise on what should be done, which is then left to the fire officer to decide the final verdict on if they have to have it upgraded?
Nearly every block of flats we go into has many things wrong in the walkways alone, and who knows what is inside some of the flats! One of the schools we service in Lancing only has call points and one detector in the kitchen, but has passed every fire safety inspection for the last 25 years!
Any advice would be much appreciated.
Just had a discussion with one of the local fire officers in our area regarding one of the hotels we look after.
He told me that when we service fire alarms in any buildings, they have to be unto the current design standard or they fail the inspection. The hotel alarm was installed by a bunch of cowboys a few years back, (previous owners choice) and parts of it were wired in LSF T&E. I mentioned this to the inspector 2 years ago, and he assumed it was ok as we did not design it, as long as any additional points were installed to current standards.
Does this mean that when testing buildings we are to fail them if a detector wired 40 years ago is too close to a light fitting? Or the cables installed 20 years ago do not comply to current standards? Or there are not enough detectors to make it a current L2 system or what is advised in BS5839 P1?
The reason I am asking is because I thought when testing we are responsible for checking the current fire alarm system works and we can only advise on what should be done, which is then left to the fire officer to decide the final verdict on if they have to have it upgraded?
Nearly every block of flats we go into has many things wrong in the walkways alone, and who knows what is inside some of the flats! One of the schools we service in Lancing only has call points and one detector in the kitchen, but has passed every fire safety inspection for the last 25 years!
Any advice would be much appreciated.