1994 - The NFPA 20 pump was linked to a stored water source.  A water works
system was related to a booster pump.
1999 - NFPA 20 pump required in all cases.
2002 - Seems to track with 1999 except new paragraph 6.5.4 is added (with no
indication it's new and no substantiation since it was part of a general
manual of style reformatting).  The intent of the new paragraph appears to
mean that all pumps are to be fire pumps since there is no indication this
paragraph was anything but a formatting change.
2007 - Same as 2002.
2010 - Same as 2002.

I think the intent is NFPA 20 in all cases (except the well source)
described by NFPA 13R since the 1999 edition.

Bill Brooks

William N. Brooks, P.E.
Brooks Fire Protection Engineering Inc.
372 Wilett Drive
Severna Park, MD 21146-1904
410-544-3620
410-544-3032 FAX
412-400-6528 Cell

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of George Church
Sent: Thursday, January 13, 2011 5:45 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: 2010 NFPA 13R 9.3

If you can have a well with sufficient refresh and capacity, you can
oversize the well pump and have a reliable water supply which fulfills
either (1) or (4) depending on semantics/definitions. And what's APPROVED.
We happened across a 36" diam well with 3,000 gal in it, oversized the well
pump, connected it to the sprinklers and a new gang bath in this housing
project, and saved the customer $25,000.

My understanding is the same as Cliffs, but upon re-reading the original
text, no-it does NOT say that a FIRE pump must be used, just that IF you
install a fire pump, do it per #20.
Betcha that wasn't the intent of the committee.


George Church'
Rowe Sprinkler
[email protected]
570-837-7647

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of David
Blackwell
Sent: Thursday, January 13, 2011 4:58 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: 2010 NFPA 13R 9.3

The code text in 2010 NFPA 13R 9.3 mentions only "pump", not "fire pump" as
the minimum standard requirement.  Is that correct?  
[I read the commentary to both 9.3 and 9.4 and began to doubt whether a
non-fire pump could be used.  It is clear that 9.4 code requires, where
used, a fire pump must meet NFPA 20; however, I don't read 9.3 as actually
requiring a fire pump be used to meet the "pump" indicated in 9.3(1) or
9.3(4).]

Perhaps my brain will work better in the morning while still fresh...


Respectfully,

David W. S. Blackwell, II, PE, CFPE
Engineering 
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