hi i just wonder how do yo test a fire alarm, what test needs to be done to sign it off, what qualification do you need to do the fire alarm testing job and what makes you a fire alarm engineer? is the NIC EIC Fire alarm and Emergency Lighting 2 days course enough to becoma an engineer?
The very simple answer is you test a fire alarm system as though lives depended upon it. They do.
Fire alarm testing can be carried out by any competent person. The way in which someone is judged to be competent is subjective, but the most widely accepted way of proving competence to do so is by successful completion of the FIA training modules (formerly BFSPA) - which are designed to test and inform on knowledge of applicable standards, technical competence, installation and servicing knowledge, and so on, and most importantly, design understanding.
You CANNOT effectively test a fire alarm system if you do not know whether or not it complies with the design reasons it was installed to satisfy, AND whether or not that design continues to offer the protection it was mandated to provide.
The primary way of doing that is by maintaining an up to date working knowledge of fire safety and engineering principles.
As for the NIC courses, they may be enough to show some level of competence, but in no way can you become a skilled technician in two days. You can gain a very basic understanding of whatever aspects they teach however.
Signing off on a fire alarm system involves verification against a certificated design, compliance with the standards, the design spec, electrical testing, functional testing, and some other stuff.
Be aware too, that in signing off any aspect of a fire alarm system, you place yourself in a position of liability in respect of that system. E.g. if you maintain that system and sign your sheet to say it is all working, and a subsequent fire is not detected, there will be questions asked, and hard ones at that. Not only will you be required to prove your competence at that point, but also to prove that the system was, indeed working in the way it was intended to, in compliance with the design, and that any limitations, non-compliances, or failures were duly and properly reported to the responsible person at the time of inspection with an explanation of the failure, and a properly explained recommendation for remedials (or the likely outcome should they not be completed).
My simple recommendations are - get some experience with another fire alarm company first, play around with some kit and find out what it does, and invest in good training - courses like the
TTS 470 one, however, will only ever give you the basic scope of all you'll ultimately need to know.
After 25 years of involvement with fire safety, among other things, I still feel I am learning every day, and even as a qualified Fire Risk Assessor, I find new challenges, and a need to defer to expert knowledge I don't have (from qualified fire safety Engineers).
Quite simply, if you're serious about it, learn as much as you possibly can through employment AND training - and if it is an occasional thing only, maybe better leave it to someone who already has the skills - it would be money better spent in that case.