Electrical uses NFPA 70 and building codes, Plumbing uses International Plumbing Code for the most part, Mechanical uses a vast array of Building code, mechanical code, NFPA Standards, ASHRAE, SMACNA etc. depending on the system being designed. (Mech./HVAC is no piece of cake)
MAYBE the FPE has a bit better understanding of what he's looking at then the MPE. We all know the PE's don't do any real work, the real work is done by the designers, the PE's just handle schedules, grunt now and then and then stamp the dwgs. cringing the whole time while wondering what they're stamping. ;) (ok, that was tongue-in-cheek, no hate mail please) Since the majority of construction is commercial and residential in relation to the industrial realm, there is little need for a lot of in-depth hazards type analysis' to be done. No need for special fire modeling or any of that. So as you say, why a need for an FPE? Good question. However an EXPERIENCED FPE or OTHER design specialist can be of value when the project is not an off the shelf typical cracker box and proper protection isn't out of one of the NFPA 13 Tables. Craig L. Prahl, CET Fire Protection Specialist Mechanical Department CH2MHILL Lockwood Greene 1500 International Drive PO Box 491, Spartanburg, SC 29304-0491 Direct - 864.599.4102 Fax - 864.599.8439 [email protected] http://www.ch2m.com -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Chris Cahill Sent: Wednesday, January 07, 2009 1:48 PM To: [email protected] Subject: RE: another fire - this will be interesting Does the mechanical, plumbing or electrical community have the equivalent of NFPA 13? I don't think they do. I'm serious I just don't really know. Our good book tells us both what is needed and really almost how to accomplish. A heating section of the code might stipulate a temperature (like our density) but doesn't tell them what type of heat source and how to get it there. Do you use forced hot air, in floor heat, radiant.....Spiral duct, square duct, what velocity, what size. We are based on one media of suppression - water. We aren't dealing with such varying delivery methods such as conduction, radiation vs. convection. I have to believe there are pros and cons to each and someone needs to evaluate what best fits the situation. I have to believe this is more than style differences. They get to balance different rooms with different thermal properties, day/night windows/no windows, same temp but more/less BTU's. We get the density for most projects from the book (temperature). Arguably there can only be one correct density whether there are window or not. HPS storage might have a few different whether ESFR, in-racks, roof only..... We really only have one pipe type in commercial construction - steel. OK wall thickness may vary but it's still round steel pipe, we may vary the ends with thread and grooves but that's style not performance in delivering a density. OK you might throw in a little plastic (but rare). So at best you have two choices steel and plastic and plastic is rather limited in approved applications. We only have a limited number of orifice sizes and usually it's a choice between 2. Depending on the density and area you have a fixed gpm to provide. OH at standard spacing k5.6 if you have a lot of pressure or k8. Would anyone use larger, possible but unlikely. 20'x20' light hazard k11 or k14 depending on pressure again. To an extent the only thing an FPE could add to most projects is style. Maybe a little judgment in life span by spec'ing thicker wall or joining methods. But again that's style in the performance during fire. Is our better cook book really the reason for the differences between MPE and FPE? Chris Cahill, P.E. Fire Protection Engineer Sentry Fire Protection, Inc. 763-658-4483 763-658-4921 fax Email: [email protected] Mail: P.O. Box 69 Waverly, MN 55390 Location: 4439 Hwy 12 SW Waverly, MN 55390 -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected] Sent: Wednesday, January 07, 2009 11:03 AM To: [email protected] Subject: RE: another fire - this will be interesting I've had that discussion about the HVAC group just putting an "X" on the drawing and stating "Provide HVAC systems per the applicable codes and standards" and got a deer in the headlights response. But clients in our business usually will take what you tell them they need. Most of the resistance to doing detailed FP engineering comes from within our own house. And again it's a matter of whether the competition is doing it or not and your price is competitive with the detailed FP work or it's best to drop it and put it on the contractor so the cost is not reflected in the engineering cost estimate. Over the years I've seen more and more design being shifted off to contractors in various disciplines as a way to reduce engineering costs. It's a money game because ultimately nothing is for free. I've even seen in-house PM's bypass engineering directly and hire a design build contractor who subs all the disciplines out to design build subs. No engineering dollars spent at all, makes him look real good and real profitable. Craig L. Prahl, CET Fire Protection Specialist Mechanical Department CH2MHILL Lockwood Greene 1500 International Drive PO Box 491, Spartanburg, SC 29304-0491 Direct - 864.599.4102 Fax - 864.599.8439 [email protected] http://www.ch2m.com -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Paul Pinigis Sent: Wednesday, January 07, 2009 11:46 AM To: [email protected] Subject: RE: another fire - this will be interesting The lack of detail on the engineer's sprinkler drawings is often dictated by the client, not the A/E firm. For example, the Navy will not allow us to do detailed designs because they (like many others) believe that will lead to change orders. Somehow they don't have a problem with the HVAC engineer or the plumbing engineer showing their detailed designs. I would like to see equal treatment; the HVAC engineers should show a hatch pattern on the floor plan with a note that says "deign ductwork to provide a comfortable environment.". Paul Pinigis, P.E. Life Safety Department Head -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected] Sent: Wednesday, January 07, 2009 10:57 AM To: [email protected] Subject: RE: another fire - this will be interesting You'll have to do more than just make your magical FPE's appear from the sky, you'll have to change the mindset of an entire industry. For too long the A/E industry has felt it was a waste of time and money to do detailed design for fire protection, the thought being that since the contractor did all that for free, why duplicate the effort. Less hours spent on fire protection meant more hours to be used by someone else or could be saved altogether. That makes the PM look good, hours unspent=bigger bonus. So even if you did have your super FPE's appear, they would still not be able to produce the documents the contractors would love to see. Trying to educate project managers, schedulers, department managers etc...... is an uphill battle. They don't understand the FP industry, how it works, who does what, submittals to AHJ's, minimum information required on a drawing package, when in the course of the project fire protection needs to start and finish, what info is needed to do the fp design work (when you are doing more than an "X" on a drawing, and the list of obstacles goes on and on. Next project, you start the battle all over again. Other disciplines don't understand the rules you have for head spacing, deflector distances below decks, obstructions, water pressure and flow issues, etc. Most think FP as being able to move where ever so they have more room and are often told that very thing by their supervisors. You don't know how many times I've been told by ME's who are supposed to be responsible for FP work that it is so confusing. What's scary is most probably know just enough to pass the FPE. So that's obviously not the answer to the overall problem. Craig L. Prahl, CET Fire Protection Specialist Mechanical Department CH2MHILL Lockwood Greene 1500 International Drive PO Box 491, Spartanburg, SC 29304-0491 Direct - 864.599.4102 Fax - 864.599.8439 [email protected] http://www.ch2m.com -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of George Church Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2009 11:24 AM To: [email protected] Subject: RE: another fire - this will be interesting We'd need several hundred qualified FPEs (or equal) to fall out of the sky in order to do what you say, as desirable a concept as you present. That and a couple thousand more so we contractors can put them on staff so we can evaluate water supplies and perform hydraulic calculations in accordance with the SFPE White Paper (unless the more recent revs have allowed us to calc systems like we've been doing as an industry since there were calcs). Instead we have FPE-Plumbing Designer ACTING like FPEs despite being only casually familiar with our industry, codes, standards, materials, etc.- i.e., practicing outside their area of competence. And so we don't just call this PE bashing, I'll point out that contractors evaluating water supplies- and that would be all of us performing calcs based on some flow test, ours or someone elses- need to be aware of lowest tank gradient, the importance of correcting for elevation and other corrections needed to move the data correctly from the test to the floor flange. I have a project where my competitor doing an adjacent building on same site off same main is using a flow test result that is 10 PSI higher than mine, with twice the flow. I've become familiar with the site, water supply, and did a more accurate test than they did, I guess that's the price of being able to sleep at night. glc -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Paul Pinigis Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2009 10:35 AM To: [email protected] Subject: RE: another fire - this will be interesting Very well said John. This is exactly the approach that we take; we look at the building or project holistically and our fire protection engineers direct the architect, mechanical, electrical, structural, telecom, etc. to ensure coordination and compliance. Paul Pinigis, P.E. Life Safety Department Head Hankins and Anderson Consulting Engineers 4880 Sadler Road Suite 300 Glen Allen, VA 23060 v: (804) 285.4171 f: (804) 217.8520 d:(804) 521-7011 http://www.haengineers.com -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of John Drucker Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2009 9:46 AM To: [email protected] Subject: RE: another fire - this will be interesting Simply put "fire protection" is not seamless. Often enough it's a patchwork of pieces and parts assembled without a clear and common objective. We see this everyday with smoke detectors being installed in unsprinklered elevator hoistways because no one told the alarm engineer that sprinklers had been eliminated by the sprinkler engineer, or fire dampers installed in one hour walls in fully sprinklered buildings because no one told the mechanical engineer. The disconnect with the fire service is yet another example, site planning left to the civil engineer without regard to fire protection needs. What we need are MEPF firms, engineering firms that employ and fully utilize fire protection engineers to look at the big picture, assess, plan, design, coordinate and supervise cost effective and efficient fire protection solutions. If as a fire protection engineer you're simply designing fire alarm or sprinkler systems you are not working to your full potential ! There are firms that provide life safety analysis to provide passive fire protection solutions, often coined working for the "dark side" they nonetheless do what others are not, looking at the big picture. High rise sprinklers in Chicago or San Diego anyone ? So how does the active fire protection community counter this claim, perhaps by long term planning, synergistic value driven engineering. It goes all the way back to codes and standards, how many cycles did it take to recognize sprinklers in fully sprinklered buildings for notification survivability on fire alarm systems ? One stop shopping ladies and gentlemen, one stop shopping. Sincerely John Drucker Fire Protection Subcode Official (AHJ) Building/Fire/Electrical Inspector Safe Buildings Save Lives ! -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Chris Cahill Sent: Monday, January 05, 2009 10:36 AM To: [email protected] Subject: RE: another fire - this will be interesting Ron said "(I suspect the savings in mains, hydrants, fire stations, apparatus and firefighters is way more than a wash in fully sprinklered, planned communities than the cost of sprinklering schools)." Were these savings realized? Last I read which was a long time ago there was very little saved on the reduction in the list you provided. They never actually followed through in reducing mains and limiting stations etc. I will certainly say in the macro scale these saving are not being fully realized. Hell we still have fully paid stations in many departments that average < 1 call a day and plenty more that are < 2. As a pay-per-call volunteer I saw more fire than many paid guys in these parts. Chris Cahill, P.E. Fire Protection Engineer Sentry Fire Protection, Inc. 763-658-4483 763-658-4921 fax Email: [email protected] Mail: P.O. Box 69 Waverly, MN 55390 Location: 4439 Hwy 12 SW Waverly, MN 55390 -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ron Greenman Sent: Friday, January 02, 2009 2:05 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: another fire - this will be interesting Good point so far overlooked. There's also the dubious "saved foundation" success that may have not been worth the risk of going into harm's way. And no one has brought up the environmental advantages of sprinklers--less smoke, less destroyed building materials to dispose of, less dirty water to process and, of course, less water used overall. And the Scottsdale less public money spent on firefighting infrastructure (I suspect the savings in mains, hydrants, fire stations, apparatus and firefighters is way more than a wash in fully sprinklered, planned communities than the cost of sprinklering schools). On Fri, Jan 2, 2009 at 11:49 AM, Dave <[email protected]> wrote: > Since we are offering up various thoughts and theories on the general application of sprinklers ..... Regardless of how much egress time is allegedly available or occupant ability to respond or even construction materials & methods - there still is a fire in a building - Presuming we get everyone out safely and that eliminates the 'life safety need for sprinklers' will we then NOT call the fire department to respond?? > > Once there's a fire in a building there is another completely real > life hazard in play - the responding emergency personnel. Some may enter the building and be very close to harm's way and others may respond and have ancillary functions - traffic control, EMS, crowds etc. Regardless of the specifics we can generally agree that a fire in a non-sprinklered building will be larger than the same fire in a sprinklered building. It's not always the fire but medical emergencies or trips & falls that create the threat of harm. The larger the fire the greater its duration and intensity - all of which increase exposure and life safety risk to responders. > > Personally I don't get behind the non-combustible and limited or low > fuel load argument as a valid application of sprinkler omission. Maybe thats just my narrow focus or perhaps its because I've been to alot bigger fires in non-sprinklered buildings than sprinklered buildings. The closer you get to the gun - the bigger the bullet. > > Thanks & Happy New Year > Dave P. > Fireman first and always. > _______________________________________________ > Sprinklerforum mailing list > http://lists.firesprinkler.org/mailman/listinfo/sprinklerforum > For Technical Assistance, send an email to: > [email protected] > > To Unsubscribe, send an email > to:[email protected] > (Put the word unsubscribe in the subject field) > -- Ron Greenman at home.... _______________________________________________ Sprinklerforum mailing list http://lists.firesprinkler.org/mailman/listinfo/sprinklerforum For Technical Assistance, send an email to: [email protected] To Unsubscribe, send an email to:[email protected] (Put the word unsubscribe in the subject field) _______________________________________________ Sprinklerforum mailing list http://lists.firesprinkler.org/mailman/listinfo/sprinklerforum For Technical Assistance, send an email to: [email protected] To Unsubscribe, send an email to:[email protected] (Put the word unsubscribe in the subject field) CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY: This email message is intended only for the use of the individual or entity to which it is addressed and may contain information that is privileged and confidential, nor is it, unless specifically stated, intended to be relied upon by any person or persons other than the individual or entity named above and no warranties or representations are made or intended to persons or entities not named above. 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