If everything in the range lanes is concrete or non-combustable, just put the system in. When something gets hit and water discharges, turn it of, make repairs and let it dry.
Mark at Aero 602 820-7894 Sent from my iPhone > On Mar 4, 2016, at 10:42 AM, "Jay Stough" <[email protected]> wrote: > > I am looking for guidance on designing sprinklers in a shooting range. > Something about little glass bulbs or solder links in an area that has high > velocity projectiles, seems not right. Everything in each alley (including > the separation walls) are non-combustible. The only thing combustible at > the end of the range is shredded rubber used to absorb the impact after the > target. The rubber is treated with flame retardant and replaced every > three months. Each alley has a series of baffles below the roof that are > at a 45 degree angle for sound. The designer of the facility has done many > of these without sprinklers in this area of the building. He has even shot > tracers to see how the flame retardant hold up and the flame goes out is > less than 20 seconds. A fire marshal is saying to sprinkler everything. > If you have any insight, I am listening closely. > > *Jay Stough* > NICET IV LAYOUT > NICET III ITM > _______________________________________________ > Sprinklerforum mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.firesprinkler.org/listinfo.cgi/sprinklerforum-firesprinkler.org _______________________________________________ Sprinklerforum mailing list [email protected] http://lists.firesprinkler.org/listinfo.cgi/sprinklerforum-firesprinkler.org
