Amen, Thom!

As a member of the engineering community I completely agree.

Paul, in my experience, most engineering firms allow their people to work 
outside their area of expertise - as long as MEs are doing sprinkler 'designs' 
this will be true. Kudos to your firm for bucking this trend.

There was a time in the distant past when MEs DID layout of sprinkler systems - 
pipe schedules.  I know they usually didn't do it quite right.  But it was a 
heck of a lot more 'engineering' than they do today.  Then the calculated 
system came into being and they never learned how it worked.  Through laziness 
and frankly, a lack of ethics, they have completely washed their hands of the 
fire sprinkler 'problem.' (Ironic for a profession defined as 'problem 
solving') Thus, whatever remaining small percentage of engineering they were 
doing on sprinkler systems was handed over to the low-bid contractors. They 
quietly get away with it because owners and/or architects see "dots and lines" 
and assume that the "diagrammatic" drawing of a sprinkler system actually helps 
contractors.

Of course, they DO provide a shop drawing review: and NONE of you contractors 
would know to add heads below ductwork in the mechanical rooms without the MEs 
input!

It would be NICE if the jurisdictions had better enforcement of engineering - 
but too many are too small and/or strapped for money.  This problem must be 
addressed from within the engineering community. Those of us who are trying to 
do things right must continue to teach the masses and grow our businesses.  In 
our small market we've managed to force one of our competitors to take and 
eventually pass the FPE exam - he still can't and doesn't actually design 
sprinkler systems, but they at least are feeling some pressure.  Many of our 
competitors now include separate fire protection sheets - because our common 
clients are starting to expect it. No, their fire protection sheets don't have 
any better "designs' than when they were part of the Mechanical sheets, but 
again, they're beginning to feel the pressure.  These are extremely small baby 
steps, but we have to start somewhere. The more quality work we put out there, 
the more the market will learn to recognize it  - and miss it when the MEs get 
the next job.

Engineers CAN design sprinkler systems. All FPEs do NOT "just make things 
worse." We just need to encourage more to specialize in the field.

So if you find engineers doing their work correctly, please let them know and 
more importantly, let their (and your) clients know. It has been said many 
times on this forum that you also need to call out the engineers who aren't 
doing their jobs.  I know this is more difficult than it sounds: many times the 
sprinkler contractor is the low-man on the construction totem pole and is often 
ignored; the mechanical contractor looking for your price doesn't care about 
your thoughts on the engineer's plans.  But when you get the chance to talk to 
owners or architects or AHJs, bring up the engineering problem.  Suggest they 
use someone else for fire protection on their next project. Teach them that 
sprinkler design is NOT a branch of plumbing design.

Mark A. Sornsin, PE
Fire Protection Engineer
Ulteig Engineers, Inc.
Fargo, ND
Direct:    701. 280.8591
[email protected]



-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Thom McMahon
Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2009 2:29 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: another fire - this will be interesting

Actually this is the engineering community's problem, not mine. You're the
one's that allow incompetent work to be done by engineers that are neither
qualified or trained to do it. Working "Outside their area of expertise" If
all states licensed engineers by discipline or degree, or had some really
effective bylaws and penalties for engineers that do work outside their
knowledge or training it might help. Most states like Colorado allow the
engineers to "Self Police" their brother engineers, and unless someone dies
or a huge financial loss occurs, they rarely do more than send "censure
notes" to fellow engineers.(Please don't be bad anymore, and take that 3 day
NFPA 13 class, cause that's all the training you need to DESIGN fire
sprinkler systems, because you already know everything else.)
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