Why do you suppose that the MHCLG did not feel it necessary to mandate levels of performance for cables with respect to their reaction to fire as was their prerogative under CPR?
lyledunn:
... if the designer specifies LSF cable for the bedrooms, for example, they might assume that risk has been reduced from what it otherwise would have been had standard twin and earth cables been used. .... but I just get the impression that we are responding in an almost knee-jerk fashion due to rightful focus on recent tragic fires.
lyledunn:
Not sure what you mean by 7671 requiring risk assessment OMS, but I do understand the imperatives for designers selecting cables with better performance in fire.
BS 7671 leaves this selection to the designer - so it is risk based.
However, imperatives should be evidence-based and I can find nothing in the way of forensic reports detailing the contribution cabling made in real fire situations.
Agreed - but there is a certain amount of evidence behind this - if only to say that xxkg/m of PVC cable in an escape route could produce yy/kg of smoke - but if OHLS was used it would be a lower quantity of smoke.
For example, it would seem reasonable that cables with improved fire performance are installed say in a hotel situation but, equally, not unreasonable that they are not. Some designers, on the other hand, will opt for the former under the pressure of perceived imperatives.
Or under their common law duty of care to their client?
In other words, if the designer specifies LSF cable for the bedrooms, for example, they might assume that risk has been reduced from what it otherwise would have been had standard twin and earth cables been used. Since bunching would be unlikely in the voids above bedrooms, fire safety may not have been improved one jot but it just seems that by specifying LSF the right thing has been done irrespective of cost to the client.
Sure - but bunching in corridors would be a different matter - it could easily be shown that say OHLS cabling on metallic containment was readily observable as a safer solution (in fire conditions for MoE
Dont get me wrong, I am an advocate of meticulous consideration of fire safety measures for buildings but I just get the impression that we are responding in an almost knee-jerk fashion due to rightful focus on recent tragic fires.
Maybe - but it is a scenario worthy of consideration by any competent designer - and in some sectors has been for many years. As a designer I'm happy to work with a client and other designers to achieve coordinated fire safety solutions for buildings that use of the tools available to enhance safety for both users of buildings and for FRS should they be called on to get people out "under smoke"
Alasdair Anderson:
Couldn't agree more. If you change the cable but do nothing about all the wooden furniture, etc. that hotels insist on putting in the rooms then the improvement in the event of a fire is minimal when you take into consideration the amount of cabling you are looking at. Specifying LSF cables is only part of the solution.
Sure - but we all have a part to play - and most items in an hotel room will have classifications for ignitability and surface spread of flame - plus detection and alarm that should ensure the limited number of occupants are roused and can evacuate to a place of relative safety (ie the corridor) - and the door to the room plays an important part in containing the fire. Selecting the correct cabling plays an important part in protecting that corridor for other occupants should that room compartment be breached.
OMS:
Selecting the correct cabling plays an important part in protecting that corridor for other occupants should that room compartment be breached.
Alasdair Anderson:
ps On the whole I agree with all that you said, though having been in hotels where the fire alarm has gone off I generally find myself wondering, as I wander towards the assembly point, whether everyone else in the building is happy to be burned alive - you can only do so much to protect the other occupants.
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