To put this in context, citations are referenced to the 2016 NFPA 14, so as to be more relevant to standing Committe members.
On Thu, Feb 9, 2017 at 10:07 PM, Steve Leyton <[email protected]> wrote: > You’ve taken much of what I said out of context. > We can hope for a theoretical world in which the 'secret' or 'implied' or 'intention' of the Committee needs to be divined, but few designers whom NFPA is reaching out to in the hinterlands, grew up in the culture of 'United States common practice'. They design on what they have, mostly static text. I said that even when sprinklers and standpipes are combined they are > separate systems HYDRAULICALLY. It is absolutely NOT required to combine > the demands as you implied with your statement this morning, even with the > qualifier of a partially sprinklered building. > We agree, and we realize statement 'combined is separate' was to be applied adminstratively. But there appears no clear wording in 2016 NFPA 14 -7.10.1.3.2 to convince me that the demand of the partial sprinklered system should *NOT* be combined with standpipe demand. If your vision as discussed here is truly what the NFPA 14 committee intends (and I believe your vision of the Committee you serve on, to be accurate ) then perhaps the Committee should be bold enough to write their intention in plain, simple English. > 7.10.1.3.1 *implies* that you cannot combine the systems if the building > is partially sprinklered (it could be worded better, to be sure). In that > case, you would have to determine the hydraulic demand of two completely > separate systems. If a building is fully sprinklered per 13 or 13R, then > you select the more demanding of the two (separate calc’s because they are > hydraulically designed independently of one another) and that becomes your > benchmark water supply for sizing the COMBINED system piping that serves > standpipe hose connections and sprinklers. > A: "implies"? How is a 2nd-year designer supposed to know what NFPA "implies" when I am having problems reading the implication? Maybe NFPA 14 committee members are so close to their subject that instead of seeing the division created by black and white text....you are including in your interpretation granularity from thousands of backroom details, meetings and readings which the NFPA subscriber does not contain in their experience. > > > The NFPA 14 committee added 7.10.13.1.1 in the 2013 edition BECAUSE there > has been long-running debate and confusion. This change was reactive to > and intended to be companion to the change in NFPA 13, 2010 edition that > added A.11.1.6.6 (as it was numbered in 2010) that clarifies that it isn’t > the intent to add standpipe demand as a hose stream to a sprinkler > calculation. So let’s not allow history to blur the focus both committees > have brought to the issue of combined systems calculation; better late than > never. It > ** > *IS clear in my opinion* that it is not the intent of either standard to > require concurrent demands in any form. > > "Clear in your opinion" regarding "intent", as justification for the written guidance on a fundamental and core procedure to the NFPA 14 standard is good. But not good enough for me. You have my extreme confidence (Pb > 0.99) in the accuracy of your depection of the Committee's intention for sprinklered buildings with standpipes. Not so for partially sprinklered buildings. I recognize that I am arguing against the highly regarded brand of the NFPA institution and its well deserved reputation. I realize that I am branded a non-team player for calling the question. My intention is not to throw stones, my intention is to offer suggestions for improvement. Sure, it would be better for NFPA if these comments were made in private. Better for me too, probably. But reading this kind of stuff just might get some young designers the courage to challenge some of their own problems to a more meaningful solution. Sometimes watching and listening to a debate, teaches the listener how to debate and make non-personal, goal-oriented statements. More accolades, again, to NFPA Standards committees. Without NFPA, I would not have this job interpreting what they write. NFPA 14 would widen the range of its clear intention with hydraulic calculations if we change 2016 NFPA 14 -7.10.1.3.1.1 from "In a building protected in accordance with NFPA 13 or NFPA 13R, the water supply..." to "in a building substantially protected with a sprinkler system in accordance to local building codes or risk acceptance, the water supply..." > > Your theoretical regarding a partially sprinklered building and an > automatic water supply (presumably for a standpipe system) is just that – > purely theoretical. There is NOTHING in the codes or referenced standards > that requires an automatic water supply be furnished for the manual > (presumably Class 1) elements of a low- or mid-rise building that doesn’t > require an automatic water supply. You state that > ** > *it goes to reason that an automatic water supply (ostensibly to meet > demand of sprinklers and/or Class II hose connections) would be calculated > to meet the demand of a manual standpipe system *but that would > potentially entail upgrading a pump from 100 or 250 GPM to 1000 GPM, > electrical system upgrades, maintenance issues, testing costs, etc., etc. > It does NOT go to reason that such an application would be a good idea; > manual standpipe systems are the preferred means for fire departments to > control their water supplies in a fire fight. Even in a building equipped > with an automatic standpipe, engineers and incident commanders are trained > to not trust building systems and they will override pumps as necessary, so > long as they have the capacity to pump to the top of a building with their > trucks. > > 1. I prefer manual standpipes as well, but the rest of the planet is not entirely on board with this strategy 2. the building is real, not theoretical. 3. I did not say " it goes to reason that an automatic water supply would be calculated to meet the demand of a manual system." Not even close. You mistook the denotative and connotaive intent of the writing. What I wrote stands for itself but I will paraphrase it again for further clarity. The logical point is, "we don't calculate an automatic standpipe system only because there is a manual sysetm calculation. No, we calculate the automatic system because it is installed." Reread your statement, provided below: " And such a calculation is only required of an automatic standpipe system because a manual is calculated from the FDC and represents a completely separate water supply from the sprinklers. " Simply because a couple of logical errors were made, in no way implies that your opinion and knowledge of the NFPA 14 intent on hydraulic calculational procedure for fully sprinklered buildings is anything but spot on. This message is questioning the NFPA 14 intention regarding hydraulic calculation procedure in partially sprinklered buildings. I think NFPA 14 intends to add the sprinkler and standpipe flows. Let us revisit point 2 mentioned just a few lines above. The example I mentioned, which you opined as purely theoretical, is going to C of O. As suggested in the last post, it is all but impossible to frame a prescriptive code to capture the almost infinite possibilities that can, and sometimes will materialize in the real world. If it can be built, someone someday just might. Therefore, if NFPA wants to be a better design guide and sell more publications, it should put more of the Committee intentions straight into the main body of text, as it has done when intending the designer to leave NFPA 14 and refer to NFPA 13 at section -5.4.1.3. When one reads -7.10.1.3.2 there is very little opinion, reference to NFPA 13, or vapor whiff of an intention that the NFPA 14 Committee wanted the hydraulic calcuation to separate the sprinkler demands from the standpipe demands. In fact, a strict reading of the wording implies just the opposite. Further, in a partially sprinklered building, Section -7.10.1.3.1.1 is largely not applicable, since the partially sprinklered building is not protected in accordance with the intention of NFPA 13 (fully sprinklered with exceptions to electrical rooms, etc.). The preceeding comments are based --as much as possible-- on a literal interpretation of 2016 Standard 14, rather than an opinion of what others intended. Scot Deal Excelsior Fire & Risk Engineering gms: +420 722 141 478 <+420%20722%20141%20478> GMT + 1 > > > > > The foregoing is my opinion only and is not intended to represent the NFPA > 14 Technical Committee, nor serve as an interpretation of the standard. > > > > Steve Leyton > > Protection Design & Consulting > > San Diego, CA > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > *From:* Sprinklerforum [mailto:[email protected]. > org] *On Behalf Of *å... .... > *Sent:* Thursday, February 09, 2017 12:28 PM > *To:* [email protected] > *Subject:* Committee Intention and Reducing Sprinklers' Pressure in a > Combined Standpipe/Sprinkler System > > > > > > > > > > where and by whom: **Answer: robust debate and 2016 NFPA 14 > -7.10.1.3.2. ** > > > > 14 is very clear: > > > > ** Answer: If very clear, Then why the robust debate for many years? If > one side of the argument were clearly superior, the other side should have > rested their case. Playing my own devil's advocate, it is admitted that > new ideas take decades to penetrate an industry, even in this age of social > media . It is as Max Plank said "science advances one funeral at a time > (each funeral removing another piece of intransigent old wood that up until > then -- would not bend). ** > > > > 7.10.1.3.1.1 states that in combined systems the water supply for > sprinklers and an AUTOMATIC standpipe system, “… shall be based on the > sprinkler system demand (including any hose stream demand) or the standpipe > demand, whichever is greater.” > > > > **A: -7.10.1.3.2, partially sprinklered building ** > > > > And such a calculation is only required of an automatic standpipe system > because a manual is calculated from the FDC and represents a completely > separate water supply from the sprinklers. > > > > **A: How does a manual calculation from the FDC legitimize the requirement > to verify that the automatic water supply meets the standpipe demand? It > seems to my old intransigent woody brain, given that if an automatic water > supply were proposed, one would then reasonably require a calculation to > verify this automatic water source supplied the standpipe demand -- even if > there were no manual standpipe calculation. ** > > > > And not that anyone asked, but let’s clarify that standpipes are *a > separate system *from sprinklers hydraulically *even when they’re > combined*. (underline added) > > > > **A: I and most of your audience know what you mean, but the above > sentence "...are *a separate system* ... *even when they're combined*" , > is logical fallacy at > > a simple, literal linguistic level. It is realized the explanation is an > administrative distinction, not a distinction water flow would make during > a fire. It is generous that the intention of the NFPA 14 and 13 > committees is shared here. > > > > Another logical instance for reflection is created if ---Standard for > Standpipes (NFPA 14) wants the designer to go to the Standard for > Sprinklers (NFPA 13) to execute this hydraulic calculation per common > practice. If a cross-Standard reference is the intention, then why doesn't > NFPA 14 Standpipe Standard mention in the main body of text -7.10.1.3.2 > that it wants the designer to migrate to NFPA 13 Sprinkler Standard to > finish the hydraulics? NFPA 14 -5.4.1.3 is not afraid to explicitly refer > the designer to NFPA 13 at its main body of text. When one is designing > and using the NFPA 14 Standard for Standpipes at -7.10.1.3.2, it is a > logical (even if an unsanctioned Committee practice) assumption to conduct > the primary calculation as standpipe system (e.g. 1,250 gpm for a large > system in partially sprinklered building) and then supplement the primary > calculation with the sprinkler system demand, not the reverse. > > > > Your argument is sympathetically heard. But if Standard prose don't go > into woody-headed mortals such as myself without accompanying > interpretations, we are left to divine, only from the original script that > the Standard offers us there. Why would the Standard for Standpipes not > clear up this issue and settle the debate? Maybe because the: > > > > a. issue is 'very clear' and there is not much to clean up, or > > b. change doesn't come easy to Committees as well as old guys like me, > > 1. it is embarrassing to make corrections to one's own writing, > especially in the safety industry > > 2. there is the spectre of liability as past prescriptions might now be > opined of inferior quality. In such case, the,Good Samaritan law should > apply. as NFPA committee work is far and away well intentioned. > > c. some committee members make salary from interpreting the very > obfuscatory script they sometimes write, or their colleagues write, or > their predecessors wrote, and > > d. NFPA makes money teaching these 'secrets' to denizens at the near and > far reaches of their empire where these standard practices have not yet > trickled down, or > > e). it is too difficult for a prescriptive Standard to write out every > conceivable instruction for every occasion, and so great-writing is good > enough. > > > > It is argued that item "e). is wrong and that it is not too difficult to > write better than great; it is virtually impossible. With the seemingly > unpredictable elements in our lives (at least at the quantum level ;-) we > simply can not prescriptively write Standards that will address every > situation, let alone write entire volumes without the occasional > self-conflict. Writing safety prescriptions is hard to do. That is why > intentions should be written too. Intentions should be written into the > main text of the prescriptions. But if this happened, would there be as > many transactions exchanged on the interpretations and classroom > explanations? > > > > Taking alternative position to committee opinion is very disconcreting -- > there is a tidal surge of branding one is swimming in, and potentially a > lot of bank to be losing. BIG THANKS go out to every safety committee > member and code framer that offers their time on committee and especially > whom share their opinion in public forums such as this one. Steve > generously gives of his time and recognized superior expertise, garnered > through many months of unpaid contribution to enhancing these safety > committees. I am indebted to him for many lessons. Steve, Roland, Ken > and the many sisters and brethren like them whom are sharing news we can > use on these public forums; they are the exception. Realize most > committee members do not ring in when questioned. > > > > > Scot Deal > > Excelsior Fire & Risk Engineering > > gms: +420 722 141 478 <+420%20722%20141%20478> GMT + 1 > > >
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