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And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
John Rumm wrote:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 Others are pushing for it too http://www.derbys-fire.gov.uk/keepin...hink-sprinkler |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
Andy Burns wrote:
John Rumm wrote: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 Others are pushing for it too http://www.derbys-fire.gov.uk/keepin...hink-sprinkler From that link a.. Dependable Sprinklers not only warn of a fire, they also act immediately to control it - even if no body is present. Should that not say "no one"? -- Adam |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On 30/05/2012 23:52, John Rumm wrote:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 One township in the USA mandated the installation of sprinklers in all buildings so that it could save the cost of maintaining its fire department. Colin Bignell |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
John Rumm wrote:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 John, As one who over the years has been involved in repairing several fire damaged dwellings (two with fatalities) [1], I think that sprinklers in dwellings are a bloody good idea, and is one of those where the value of fitting them could well far outweigh the costs in lives saved and reduced injuries. As for the builders shouting about the costs, they will recoupe these simply by increasing the cost of their houses from eye-watering to larcency with the extortionate profits they make on them. Now if they could legislate for householders to have some training in how a dwelling fire develops when doors are left open at night, along with the very high temperatures created, and how to escape from a burning building, that would be a bonus - but then the shoutsof a "nanny state" would be very loud! [1] Some of the sights I've seen have been horrendous, and I have a great respect for those professionals that fight the things (and a great awareness instilled in myself and family). All the best Cash Who will now climb down from his high-horse after leaving many of his thoughts on the subject left unsaid. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On Wed, 30 May 2012 23:52:36 +0100, John Rumm
wrote: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 **** the moaning *******s. This is good thing. I'm fitting sprinklers in my gaff and it's not so much to save my life, although that's important enough; it's so that I don't have to stand at the side of the road watching my house burn to the ground while the local volunteer fire brigade get their act together. I don't mind clearing up some water damage - who gives a ****e about that if the majority of the house is intact. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
"John Rumm" wrote in message o.uk... http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 It doesn't, of course, say how many of the casualties in the statistics for current deaths were in modern houses, and how many were in old, poorly maintained, overcrowded substandard housing. From the figures quoted - 36 lives out of a potential 153 - they seem to expect nearly a quarter of the fires and consequent fatalities to be in new builds or conversions. I assume there is the assumption that a sprinkler system will eliminate fires altogether? Does this mean that new homes are very dangerous, that they expect the housing stock to increase by about a quarter over the next 9 years, or that they are optimising the statistics? Cheers Dave R -- No plan survives contact with the enemy. [Not even bunny] Helmuth von Moltke the Elder (\__/) (='.'=) (")_(") |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
Cash wrote
John Rumm wrote http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 As one who over the years has been involved in repairing several fire damaged dwellings (two with fatalities) [1], I think that sprinklers in dwellings are a bloody good idea, and is one of those where the value of fitting them could well far outweigh the costs in lives saved and reduced injuries. The real problem with the cost is that only a tiny subset of houses ever have a fire that sprinklers would help with. We don’t mandate full fire hose hydrants in all houses either, for the same reason. As for the builders shouting about the costs, they will recoupe these simply by increasing the cost of their houses from eye-watering to larcency with the extortionate profits they make on them. The problem is that home buyers will have to pay that cost. Now if they could legislate for householders to have some training in how a dwelling fire develops when doors are left open at night, along with the very high temperatures created, and how to escape from a burning building, that would be a bonus - but then the shoutsof a "nanny state" would be very loud! Because, again, its just not cost effective. We don’t even do it with car drivers and they have a lot more life threatening accidents than we see with life threatening fires in houses. [1] Some of the sights I've seen have been horrendous, and I have a great respect for those professionals that fight the things (and a great awareness instilled in myself and family). |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
Grimly Curmudgeon wrote
John Rumm wrote http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 **** the moaning *******s. This is good thing. Not compulsory in all new houses it isnt. I'm fitting sprinklers in my gaff and it's not so much to save my life, although that's important enough; it's so that I don't have to stand at the side of the road watching my house burn to the ground while the local volunteer fire brigade get their act together. You've always been welcome to do anything you like, but you arent welcome to make everyone di it the way you choose to do it yourself. I don't mind clearing up some water damage - who gives a ****e about that if the majority of the house is intact. Those that choose to do something else in the event of a substantial fire. and those who ensure that there cant be substantial fire and so don't need to pay the substantial cost of what w2ont ever be used. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
"Rod Speed" wrote in message ... Grimly Curmudgeon wrote John Rumm wrote http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 **** the moaning *******s. This is good thing. Not compulsory in all new houses it isnt. I'm fitting sprinklers in my gaff and it's not so much to save my life, although that's important enough; it's so that I don't have to stand at the side of the road watching my house burn to the ground while the local volunteer fire brigade get their act together. You've always been welcome to do anything you like, but you arent welcome to make everyone di it the way you choose to do it yourself. I don't mind clearing up some water damage - who gives a ****e about that if the majority of the house is intact. Those that choose to do something else in the event of a substantial fire. and those who ensure that there cant be substantial fire and so don't need to pay the substantial cost of what w2ont ever be used. Take a lil bit more water with it, wodney. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
Rod Speed wrote:
Cash wrote John Rumm wrote http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 As one who over the years has been involved in repairing several fire damaged dwellings (two with fatalities) [1], I think that sprinklers in dwellings are a bloody good idea, and is one of those where the value of fitting them could well far outweigh the costs in lives saved and reduced injuries. The real problem with the cost is that only a tiny subset of houses ever have a fire that sprinklers would help with. But even with that "minority" it's worth the cost if it saves just one life! Just treat it as an insurance policy, and how often do you expect to claim off your house insurance? But as you are a sensible person, you still bear the cost of that - even though over many years, that policy is likely to cost far more than a sprinkler installation. We don’t mandate full fire hose hydrants in all houses either, for the same reason. Many householders would be to panicky during a fire to even think of using a hydrant (even *if* they knew how to use the hose properly). As for the builders shouting about the costs, they will recoupe these simply by increasing the cost of their houses from eye-watering to larcency with the extortionate profits they make on them. The problem is that home buyers will have to pay that cost. Or heaven forbid, the builder could reduce his profit marging by the relatively small cost of such installation during the building process - (because at that stage, when everything is accessible for first and second fixing, it is a relatively small unit cost per dwelling within the larger scheme of things). Now if they could legislate for householders to have some training in how a dwelling fire develops when doors are left open at night, along with the very high temperatures created, and how to escape from a burning building, that would be a bonus - but then the shoutsof a "nanny state" would be very loud! Because, again, its just not cost effective. There we go again, cost before the actual value of something in preventing loss of life! We don’t even do it with car drivers and they have a lot more life threatening accidents than we see with life threatening fires in houses. A very poor analogy to use, particularly as most of those "life threatening accidents" are caused by the driver's stupidity and/or lack of skill! Now, as most car drivers have had formal training and passed a test before they are let-loose on the roads by themselves, in theory at least, they are far better prepared than the average householder for any emergency - and even if they never have an accident, they are still required to have a valid insurance policy.. Cash |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
Cash wrote
Rod Speed wrote Cash wrote John Rumm wrote http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 As one who over the years has been involved in repairing several fire damaged dwellings (two with fatalities) [1], I think that sprinklers in dwellings are a bloody good idea, and is one of those where the value of fitting them could well far outweigh the costs in lives saved and reduced injuries. The real problem with the cost is that only a tiny subset of houses ever have a fire that sprinklers would help with. But even with that "minority" it's worth the cost if it saves just one life! Fraid not. There are much more cost effective ways of ensuring no loss of life. We don’t even mandate back to fire station alarms in every house for a reason, and that would be much cheaper than sprinklers in every house. Just treat it as an insurance policy, No thanks, because there are much cheaper insurance policys. and how often do you expect to claim off your house insurance? I choose not to insure my house. Essentially because I designed it so that no fire will ever burn it down and I know it cant be washed away in a flood etc. But as you are a sensible person, you still bear the cost of that I don’t actually. - even though over many years, that policy is likely to cost far more than a sprinkler installation. In fact that’s bogus because people like you would have both. We don’t mandate full fire hose hydrants in all houses either, for the same reason. Many householders would be to panicky during a fire to even think of using a hydrant (even *if* they knew how to use the hose properly). Just as true of the places where they are mandated. As for the builders shouting about the costs, they will recoupe these simply by increasing the cost of their houses from eye- watering to larcency with the extortionate profits they make on them. The problem is that home buyers will have to pay that cost. Or heaven forbid, the builder could reduce his profit marging by the relatively small cost of such installation during the building process - Still not cost effective. Neither is back to fire station alarms in every house done that way either. (because at that stage, when everything is accessible for first and second fixing, it is a relatively small unit cost per dwelling within the larger scheme of things). Now if they could legislate for householders to have some training in how a dwelling fire develops when doors are left open at night, along with the very high temperatures created, and how to escape from a burning building, that would be a bonus - but then the shoutsof a "nanny state" would be very loud! Because, again, its just not cost effective. There we go again, cost before the actual value of something in preventing loss of life! That’s how you decide what to mandate in all houses. We don’t mandate no combustible materials in any house for a reason, even tho that would save some lives. We don’t ban all use of cars, even tho doing that would certainly save some lives. We don’t even do it with car drivers and they have a lot more life threatening accidents than we see with life threatening fires in houses. A very poor analogy to use, Nope. And it isnt an analogy either. particularly as most of those "life threatening accidents" are caused by the driver's stupidity and/or lack of skill! Just as true of life threatening house fires. Now, as most car drivers have had formal training and passed a test before they are let-loose on the roads by themselves, in theory at least, they are far better prepared than the average householder for any emergency Not for what to do after a life threatening accident they arent. - and even if they never have an accident, they are still required to have a valid insurance policy.. Which doesn’t do a damned thing about stopping someone from dying. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
Rod Speed wrote:
I choose not to insure my house. Essentially because I designed it so that no fire will ever burn it down and I know it cant be washed away in a flood etc. Have you also designed it so that hurricanes never occur, that heavy rain never occurs, that scotes never chuck bricks through your window or smash you door in. There's a reson for the trope "if you can't afford to insure X, you can't afford X". JGH |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
jgharston wrote
Rod Speed wrote I choose not to insure my house. Essentially because I designed it so that no fire will ever burn it down and I know it cant be washed away in a flood etc. Have you also designed it so that hurricanes never occur, We don't get hurricanes here. We don't get cyclones here either. Yes, I designed the roof so it wont blow off and since I built the house myself, doing almost all the work myself, it would be a hell of a lot cheaper to just do the roof again than even a single year's insurance. that heavy rain never occurs, Heavy rain does occur sometimes, but the house is designed so that that does not result in an insurance claim and its been proven over 40 years now that it was designed to handle heavy rain fine. that scotes never chuck bricks through your window or smash you door in. It's a lot cheaper to just replace the window if that happens. There's a reson for the trope "if you can't afford to insure X, you can't afford X". Its just another silly line. I only insured the new car because I happened to find an operation that would insure it for just $100 and when its now been hiked to 3 times that, don't bother with that insurance anymore either. That's a separate matter to the compulsory injury insurance which doesn't cover injury to me. If I do get injured in a car accident, our very decent national health care system will pay for that without me having to pay even a cent unless I want to buy a newspaper when in hospital and I have to do that even when I'm not in hospital. The TV in hospital is free. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On Thu, 31 May 2012 00:38:50 +0100 David WE Roberts wrote :
From the figures quoted - 36 lives out of a potential 153 - they seem to expect nearly a quarter of the fires and consequent fatalities to be in new builds or conversions. I assume there is the assumption that a sprinkler system will eliminate fires altogether? Control, not eliminate. My understanding - I might be wrong - is that domestic sprinklers sprinkle rather than dowse. I've got them in my flat, but it is a 43-storey tower. If a sprinkler is set off the fire brigade gets notified automatically - serious money fine if it's your carelessness. Where I do think sprinklers should be mandatory is in multi-dwelling timber frame buildings. Do I believe that all the required fire stopping is incorporated at the time of construction? No - and if when you do an inspection as a BCO it's missing, what about all the work done between inspections. Will electricians and plumbers doing later alterations pull it out of the way if necessary, yes. Will someone who has taken a fancy to new concealed downlights worry about making holes in the ceiling that is meant to provide fire protection to the flat above? On a good day perhaps. -- Tony Bryer, Greentram: 'Software to build on', Melbourne, Australia www.greentram.com |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On 31/05/12 01:43, Cash wrote:
There we go again, cost before the actual value of something in preventing loss of life! Cash The more you wrap people up in cotton wool, the more cavalier they become. We do it to children now and the real world comes as a terrible shock. Most fires, I suspect are caused by carelessness or irresponsibility and it should not be everyone else's responsibility to take care of you, with the attendant additional costs - no doubt the fire prevention industry will deem an annual inspection is essential. Yes one life's too many, so take care of yourself, your family and your property. Andy C |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
Cash ?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?@?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.? .?.?.?.?.//.com.i
nvalid: Rod Speed wrote: Cash wrote John Rumm wrote http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 As one who over the years has been involved in repairing several fire damaged dwellings (two with fatalities) [1], I think that sprinklers in dwellings are a bloody good idea, and is one of those where the value of fitting them could well far outweigh the costs in lives saved and reduced injuries. The real problem with the cost is that only a tiny subset of houses ever have a fire that sprinklers would help with. But even with that "minority" it's worth the cost if it saves just one life! Would you still say that if the same money could be used some other way to save *two* lives? -- Mike Barnes |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
Mike Barnes wrote
Cash ?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?@?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.? .?.?.?.?.//.com.invalid wrote Rod Speed wrote: Cash wrote John Rumm wrote http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 As one who over the years has been involved in repairing several fire damaged dwellings (two with fatalities) [1], I think that sprinklers in dwellings are a bloody good idea, and is one of those where the value of fitting them could well far outweigh the costs in lives saved and reduced injuries. The real problem with the cost is that only a tiny subset of houses ever have a fire that sprinklers would help with. But even with that "minority" it's worth the cost if it saves just one life! Would you still say that if the same money could be used some other way to save *two* lives? And even if he would, I prefer to make my own choices on how to avoid ending up with even one corpse due to a serious fire in my house and I have in fact done just that, for much less money than sprinklers would have cost. I have in fact never ever had any fire at all, let alone one that would have triggered a sprinkler, in 40 years. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On 31/05/2012 00:31, Cash wrote:
John Rumm wrote: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 John, As one who over the years has been involved in repairing several fire damaged dwellings (two with fatalities) [1], I think that sprinklers in dwellings are a bloody good idea, and is one of those where the value of fitting them could well far outweigh the costs in lives saved and reduced injuries. That's the whole problem you don't seem to get. A lot less than £6.7m could be spent in saving one person in other fields. Town bypasses could be just one. I'm sure others here will come up with other suggestions. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
"David WE Roberts" wrote in message ... "John Rumm" wrote in message o.uk... http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 It doesn't, of course, say how many of the casualties in the statistics for current deaths were in modern houses, and how many were in old, poorly maintained, overcrowded substandard housing. From the figures quoted - 36 lives out of a potential 153 - they seem to expect nearly a quarter of the fires and consequent fatalities to be in new builds or conversions. I assume there is the assumption that a sprinkler system will eliminate *fatal* fires altogether? Does this mean that new homes are very dangerous, that they expect the housing stock to increase by about a quarter over the next 9 years, or that they are optimising the statistics? Edited to make it slightly clearer. I note neither of the sprinkler enthusiasts actually tried to answer the question about how reliable the statistics were. The obvious point being that the claimed saving of life seems to be quite a high percentage of all fatal fires, given that the proposal is to only fit sprinklers in new build (which isn't a massive proportion of the total housing stock at the moment) and conversions. -- No plan survives contact with the enemy. [Not even bunny] Helmuth von Moltke the Elder (\__/) (='.'=) (")_(") |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
That's the whole problem you don't seem to get. A lot less than £6.7m
could be spent in saving one person in other fields. Town bypasses could be just one. I'm sure others here will come up with other suggestions. The DfT "value of a life" figure is around £m2 so it's easy peasey: light more roads/junctions. (DfT were always the government leaders on how to deal with death and injury in cost-benefit analyses because they have to do them so often for road schemes, speed limits etc) Cash's approach ("no price is too high....") has of course only one logical conclusion: regulation and tax rates are increased until every penny is being spent on keeping people alive "no matter what". So, for example, we would all be compelled to eat the healthiest/cheapest possible diet to maintain life while also freeing up more money to comply with regulations and taxes. Eg building regulations for cameras in every room (retrofitted to current stock) and taxes to pay for the serried ranks of staff in the monitoring units to watch if someone collapses. Then demolish houses and build flats so people live without stairs they might fall down (bungalows being of course far to ungreen). But I am sorry to say I doubt we'd get to the desirable step of sterilisation for those who cannot understand the simple concepts of (i) cost-benefit analysis and (ii) choices. -- Robin reply to address is (meant to be) valid |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On 31/05/2012 00:37, Grimly Curmudgeon wrote:
On Wed, 30 May 2012 23:52:36 +0100, John Rumm wrote: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 **** the moaning *******s. This is good thing. I'm fitting sprinklers in my gaff and it's not so much to save my life, although that's important enough; it's so that I don't have to stand at the side of the road watching my house burn to the ground while the local volunteer fire brigade get their act together. I don't mind clearing up some water damage - who gives a ****e about that if the majority of the house is intact. Having seen the speed of a fire brigade boat on a shout in Venice, it is no surprise that you see sprinklers in so many hotels there. They make sense wherever the response time is likely to be slow and, in America, have been proven to be very effective at stopping the upward spread of fire in tall buildings. Colin Bignell |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On May 31, 12:37*am, Grimly Curmudgeon wrote:
On Wed, 30 May 2012 23:52:36 +0100, John Rumm wrote: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 **** the moaning *******s. This is good thing. I'm fitting sprinklers in my gaff and it's not so much to save my life, although that's important enough; it's so that I don't have to stand at the side of the road watching my house burn to the ground while the local volunteer fire brigade get their act together. I don't mind clearing up some water damage - who gives a ****e about that if the majority of the house is intact. Our smoke detectors are very sensitive. Would sprinklers be triggered by the same mechanism, resulting in a wet house whenever the toast is burnt! Jonathan |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
America, have been proven to be very effective at stopping the upward
spread of fire in tall buildings. which is presumably why sprinklers are AIUI the normal means here of complying with the BRs for new residential builds over 30m high. But in a new build house with linked smoke alarms throughout and escape windows upstairs I still doubt they are cost-effective. -- Robin reply to address is (meant to be) valid |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
In article
, Jonathan wrote: On May 31, 12:37 am, Grimly Curmudgeon wrote: On Wed, 30 May 2012 23:52:36 +0100, John Rumm wrote: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 **** the moaning *******s. This is good thing. I'm fitting sprinklers in my gaff and it's not so much to save my life, although that's important enough; it's so that I don't have to stand at the side of the road watching my house burn to the ground while the local volunteer fire brigade get their act together. I don't mind clearing up some water damage - who gives a ****e about that if the majority of the house is intact. Our smoke detectors are very sensitive. Would sprinklers be triggered by the same mechanism, resulting in a wet house whenever the toast is burnt! The sprinklers that I have seen close up - admittedly a few years ago - rely on the fire melting a blockage in the water line. I don't think toast would set those off. Relying on an electrical circuit in the case of fire would not be reliable - using electricity to hold off the sprinkers could result in soggy houses every time here was a power failure. -- From KT24 Using a RISC OS computer running v5.18 |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On 30/05/2012 23:52, John Rumm wrote:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 Reduction in your insurance bills might well make retrofit financially viable. It certainly does in commercial premises where their use isn't already mandated. Phil. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On Thu, 31 May 2012 11:28:33 +1000, Rod Speed wrote:
We don't get hurricanes here. We don't get cyclones here either. Neither did Birmingham, till 2005. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
Jonathan wrote
Grimly Curmudgeon wrote John Rumm wrote http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 **** the moaning *******s. This is good thing. I'm fitting sprinklers in my gaff and it's not so much to save my life, although that's important enough; it's so that I don't have to stand at the side of the road watching my house burn to the ground while the local volunteer fire brigade get their act together. I don't mind clearing up some water damage - who gives a ****e about that if the majority of the house is intact. Our smoke detectors are very sensitive. Sprinklers arent. Would sprinklers be triggered by the same mechanism, resulting in a wet house whenever the toast is burnt! Nope. I've worked in plenty of places with sprinklers and that doesn't happen. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
Phil wrote
John Rumm wrote http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 Reduction in your insurance bills might well make retrofit financially viable. Nope, they don't. That doesn't happen with commercial buildings that do have sprinklers. It certainly does in commercial premises where their use isn't already mandated. No it does not. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
Jethro_uk wrote
Rod Speed wrote We don't get hurricanes here. We don't get cyclones here either. Neither did Birmingham, till 2005. We wont ever get them here. And even if we did, the house would survive them fine anyway. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On 31/05/2012 08:59, Jonathan wrote:
On May 31, 12:37 am, Grimly wrote: On Wed, 30 May 2012 23:52:36 +0100, John Rumm wrote: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 **** the moaning *******s. This is good thing. I'm fitting sprinklers in my gaff and it's not so much to save my life, although that's important enough; it's so that I don't have to stand at the side of the road watching my house burn to the ground while the local volunteer fire brigade get their act together. I don't mind clearing up some water damage - who gives a ****e about that if the majority of the house is intact. Our smoke detectors are very sensitive. Would sprinklers be triggered by the same mechanism, resulting in a wet house whenever the toast is burnt! Smoke detectors detect smoke. Sprinklers detect a high temperature at ceiling level, using a fusible link or a liquid in a glass bulb that boils at anything from 57C to 260C, depending upon the liquid used, and thus breaks the glass. Most commonly seen are the red liquid glass bulbs, which break at 68C. Colin Bignell |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On 31/05/2012 09:45, Rod Speed wrote:
Phil wrote John Rumm wrote http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 Reduction in your insurance bills might well make retrofit financially viable. Nope, they don't. That doesn't happen with commercial buildings that do have sprinklers. It certainly does in commercial premises where their use isn't already mandated. No it does not. B****ks , you know nowt. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On 31/05/2012 09:52, Tim Streater wrote:
In article , Phil wrote: On 30/05/2012 23:52, John Rumm wrote: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 Reduction in your insurance bills might well make retrofit financially viable. It certainly does in commercial premises where their use isn't already mandated. When one sprinkler goes off, do they all go at the same time? Am I going to have all my possessions everywhere in the house soaked because SWMBO's doing soss in the oven? (The kitchen smoke detector goes off each time she does this.) Or if I accidentally biff one while carrying a ladder? And how do you turn them off once its clear that the danger is over? JOOI I assume that they would be installed in a kitchen. It is probably the obvious place. But the consequences of a water based sprinkler going off over a chip pan fire (the most common kitchen fire?) could be worse than not having one. We have all been trained to cover the fire rather than throw water over it. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On May 31, 9:47*am, "Rod Speed" wrote:
Jethro_uk wrote Rod Speed wrote We don't get hurricanes here. We don't get cyclones here either. Neither did Birmingham, till 2005. We wont ever get them here. And even if we did, the house would survive them fine anyway. Some diyers are able to repair the expected damage from any of the usual risks. For anyone able to, the expected cost of repairs times the probability of the happening is vastly cheaper than insurance. NT |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On Thu, 31 May 2012 00:59:40 -0700 (PDT), Jonathan wrote:
Our smoke detectors are very sensitive. Would sprinklers be triggered by the same mechanism, resulting in a wet house whenever the toast is burnt! Unlikely. They are a small glass bubble holding the water back, this bubble is full of a liquid that expands when it gets hot shattering the bubble and thus letting the water out. From the films I've seen of commercial sprinkler systems the fire has to be quite large (in domestic terms) before they go off and when they do it will be new furnishing and decorating for at least that room. Possibly replastering and new floor as well if it's chipboard... http://www.staysafeuk.com/domestic-sprinklers.html "... activate within four minutes ..." "... about 150 liters/min ..." A domestic fire will have quite a hold within four minutes, there will be a lot of smoke about. A typical smoke alarm will have gone off a lot earlier to alert any occupants to "Get Out, Stay Out, Get the Brigade out". Buildings and contents can be replaced you don't need to "save" them. Educating people to have a "fire plan" and to get the F out when the alarm sounds be that in the home or work place. 150l is a large bath full of water, every minute... I wonder where this water comes from? Most domestic supplies can't deliver that sort of flow, so how effective at extinguishing a fire large enough to trigger the sprinkler is a domestic sprinkler? One also assumes that these sprinkler systems will have an external water flow driven bell and a link to a service centre that can call the Fire Brigade out. If you did have a fire that triggered the sprinklers just after you gone on your two weeks to Malaga, without such systems there wouldn't be much, possibly no, indication that the inside is being drenched.... Then of course how vulnerable will they be to being knocked? Sprinklers are normally installed high up not the relatively low 8' ceiling of a house. Strikes me of politicians/bureaucrats reacting to "some one died" with "we must do something". Personally linked smoke/heat alarms are enough, along with decent public education. That would have far greater benefit to society but far harder to measure so the bureaucrats won't like it as they can't justify their existence. Do any of the Fire Services still have the chip pan fire demo vehicles that they used to take around Fetes, Gala Days and County Shows? It's no use telling people how to safely deal with a chip pan fire it'll just go in one ear and out the other. Show 'em, in quite dramatic terms, what happens when you do it wrong. OK I guess the open chip pan is getting to be a thing of the past these days but it will still highlight the dangers of fire. Most people these days do not have any real experience of fire, most homes no longer have open fires, people don't have bonfires to dispose of waste (garden or otherwise), kids don't make camp fires. -- Cheers Dave. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On May 31, 8:30*am, "Robin" wrote:
That's the whole problem you don't seem to get. *A lot less than £6..7m could be spent in saving one person in other fields. *Town bypasses could be just one. *I'm sure others here will come up with other suggestions. The DfT "value of a life" figure is around £m2 so it's easy peasey: light more roads/junctions. *(DfT were always the government leaders on how to deal with death and injury in cost-benefit analyses because they have to do them so often for road schemes, speed limits etc) Cash's approach ("no price is too high....") has of course only one logical conclusion: regulation and tax rates are increased until *every penny is being spent on keeping people alive "no matter what". *So, for example, we would all be compelled to eat the healthiest/cheapest possible diet to maintain life while also freeing up more money to comply with regulations and *taxes. *Eg building regulations for cameras in every room (retrofitted to current stock) and taxes to pay for the serried ranks of staff in the monitoring units to watch if someone collapses. Then demolish houses and build flats so people live without stairs they might fall down (bungalows being of course far to ungreen). But I am sorry to say I doubt we'd get to the desirable step of sterilisation for those who cannot understand *the simple concepts of (i) cost-benefit analysis and (ii) choices. Actually the consequences of financial foolishness are worse than that. The NHS has a budget of about £10k per qaly, so each 6.7 million spent saving one life with sprinklers eats up enough resources to save 670 lives. In that particular example, the money sources are to an extent different, but when it comes down to household budget and safety, there are plenty of things that could be done with that 6.7million that would save many more lives. NT |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On Thu, 31 May 2012 09:27:56 +0100, Phil wrote:
Reduction in your insurance bills might well make retrofit financially viable. Except that an accidental activation will cost similar amounts to a small flood to replace/repair the damage. A fire large enough to trigger the sprinklers will still require at least that room to be stripped and rebuilt and the rest of the house will have smoke damage. It certainly does in commercial premises where their use isn't already mandated. Commercial is different, sprinklers have their place where early control of a fire is important. Warehouses, places packed with lots of flammable materials (in the broadest sense), tall buildings where escape from upper floors isn't possible by "climbing down the knotted sheets" or jumping. -- Cheers Dave. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
"Rod Speed" wrote in message ... Jethro_uk wrote Rod Speed wrote We don't get hurricanes here. We don't get cyclones here either. Neither did Birmingham, till 2005. We wont ever get them here. And even if we did, the house would survive them fine anyway. Hilarious. LMFAO. |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On Wed, 30 May 2012 23:52:36 +0100, John Rumm
wrote: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18266064 Very cheap and easy to implement, just employ Dribble as the plumber and surface fit all pipework to the ceilings. Of course you would need to supply a hacksaw... -- |
And you thought some of the English building regs were OTT?
On 31/05/12 09:59, Andrew May wrote:
But the consequences of a water based sprinkler going off over a chip pan fire (the most common kitchen fire?) could be worse than not having one. We have all been trained to cover the fire rather than throw water over it. Don't worry. Chip pans in the home are going to banned under the planned 'Limitation of individual calorie intake to limit obesity' regulation. Andy C |
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