Mag locks

A tad off the beaten track but I would be grateful for opinion.

I look after fire safety compliance in over one hundred social clubs. Anyone who has been to one will know that many have a main entrance with an electrically controlled door entry system that allows the door to be opened from behind the bar or similar. Now there are all types of electronic locks in use, some require power to open others are just flat retaining electro-magnets that release on the circuit going open. 
It has never been a good idea to have doors with fastenings of any kind on escape doors but in the past, providing the doors met a category A designation in accordance with BS 7273 2015, (effectively meaning a fail safe arrangement connected via the fire alarm), they were accepted by local authorities for licensing purposes.

Now at least one Fire and Rescue Service have stipulated that in premises where entertainment will be held and/or intoxicating liquor is to be consumed, if these entrance doors are to be used for escape, which, invariably they will, they cannot be held closed by any “electronic” means irrespective of Category A compliance.

I completely respect their stance. I investigated several arrangements and found that they had the usual green breakglass beside the door and the doors opened on activation of the fire alarm. Unfortunately, because the normally closed contact was used on the fire alarm, removal of both normal and back up supply left the doors closed although the green breakglass unit was still available.

I want to put a case to FRS to allow the use of the flat plate type means of retaining the doors and to ensure that they are completely fail safe.

Can any one conceive of a situation where the interruption of power to the electro-magnets might not occur and how that might be overcome?

Parents
  • Yes, the battery was also removed from the FA.  The requirement is that the doors should be released to open on failure of either or both the supplies to the FA panel.

  • I don’t know about that requirement, so use the emergency green break. But what if the button doesn’t work when you press it? Maybe you should leave the backup battery out of the access control panel so then the lock will fail open. The Access CP would have to be on the same circuit as the FA.

Reply
  • I don’t know about that requirement, so use the emergency green break. But what if the button doesn’t work when you press it? Maybe you should leave the backup battery out of the access control panel so then the lock will fail open. The Access CP would have to be on the same circuit as the FA.

Children
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