tmurray
SAWHORSE
Is that a fire damper?
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Is that a fire damper?
That's been the approach in my jurisdiction. We've been raising the bar every year... as much mental anguish as it caused me to look at things like sixty miles of flex duct in a ceiling, it was more important for me to explain that wrapping a window in sheathing tape, or building a deck with deck screws as structural connections, wasn't kosher.We couldn't just keep writing the same correction time and time again, this process did not serve our interests, the interest of the contractor, of public interests. We asked ourselves why he wasn't getting it. Why he kept getting the same things wrong on every inspection. Well, we were giving him too much to learn at each inspection. So we backed it off to just the corrections that were critical. He learned those and we stopped writing the corrections and started writing new ones. About two years later, we didn't need to write any corrections. Now, we prioritized corrections on impact to life safety, and even then felt relatively safe in limiting our corrections. This guy had framed hundreds of houses and none had any significant issues. These were more related to building longevity.
Yessir. But the annular space has been lovingly closed with sprayfoam.Is that a fire damper?
At least he didn't use firecaulk. That's what I usually see.Yessir. But the annular space has been lovingly closed with sprayfoam.
Most of the assemblies out there that I've seen for square ducts with intumescent caulk require a metal flange attached to the duct/damper to ensure the intumescent material doesn't deform the duct/damper.Do you all allow intumescent fire stopping of the annular space adjacent to a fire damper?
I always made sure it was smoke tight but did not permit any intumescent products in the annular space unless explicitly permitted by the fire damper supplier in the listing.
Well, not the design professionals or contractors. But when I required all the fire dampers be ripped out and replaced in two buildings built by a certain local multi-billion dollar family owned conglomerate, their staff engineer and lawyers quickly turned their attention away from me and I got compliance when I pointed to a similar requirement in the permit conditions.It's like not a single soul sees "fire stop systems must be approved by this office prior to application."
I did that for an entire career. I encountered a handful of contractors several times a year and hundreds one time. The handful would get it wrong and when asked why they would say, "I didn't know that you were the inspector."We couldn't just keep writing the same correction time and time again
The only interest that concerned me was the public.this process did not serve our interests, the interest of the contractor, or public interests.
The only correction that I would overlook is the one that requires a vacuum breaker on a hose bib.So, we backed it off to just the corrections that were critical.
There has never been a limit put on the number of corrections that I would write. Several managers asked me to stop at twelve corrections. They felt that any more than twelve made look like I was taking it personal. I asked them what I should do about the next twelve and they said that I could write those on the next visit. No shlt...they said that and what's worse...meant it.Now, we prioritized corrections on impact to life safety, and even then, felt relatively safe in limiting our corrections.
There ya go....that would be the owner's interest.These were more related to building longevity.
Well, not the design professionals or contractors. But when I required all the fire dampers be ripped out and replaced in two buildings built by a certain local multi-billion dollar
family owned conglomerate, their staff engineer and lawyers quickly turned their attention away from me and I got compliance when I pointed to a similar requirement in the permit conditions.
Some poor HVAC engineer, who stamped the non-complaint submittal sheets, probably lost his job that day
There has never been a limit put on the number of corrections that I would write. Several managers asked me to stop at twelve corrections. They felt that any more than twelve made look like I was taking it personal. I asked them what I should do about the next twelve and they said that I could write those on the next visit. No shlt...they said that and what's worse...meant it.
I broke fifty. It took four hours. The job was framing and MEP on a new house. Not a big house either. Headquarters sent a phalanx of engineers to go over the corrections that I wrote. They validated them all and came up with one more. I was embarrassed about missing that one more. The contractor was an ethnic minority and he said that I was racist. The engineers were all from an ethnic minority. I am married to an ethnic minority. I was the only ethnic majority that worked in the district office so I was actually an ethnic minority....funny how I never felt racism.All-time record for me was 23 violations found on a building that was being sold and hadn't had its final.
Nothing in the annular space unless the fire damper manufacturer specifically allows it. The damper sleeve needs the room to allow expansion from heat to still be able to operate in the event of a fire. The retaining angles cover the gap of the annular space to make it relatively smoke tight.Do you all allow intumescent fire stopping of the annular space adjacent to a fire damper?
I always made sure it was smoke tight but did not permit any intumescent products in the annular space unless explicitly permitted by the fire damper supplier in the listing.
I am in the same situation in a small town. It has taken 5 years for the building community to get used to me but we are all generally on the same page now, with some exceptions and surprises from time to time.Your post, I think, gets to the crux of the issue. I came form a smaller jurisdiction where we typically saw the same contractors time and time again. The comment "you don't need to write every correction you see" rang true, but probably not the way it was intended in your case. At the start of my career I did one of the first framing inspection ever done in my jurisdiction. I had 3 pages of violations. I walked through everything with the framer, then we repeated the process on a second building, then we repeated it again on a third building.
We couldn't just keep writing the same correction time and time again, this process did not serve our interests, the interest of the contractor, or public interests. We asked ourselves why he wasn't getting it. Why he kept getting the same things wrong on every inspection. Well, we were giving him too much to learn at each inspection. So, we backed it off to just the corrections that were critical. He learned those and we stopped writing the corrections and started writing new ones. About two years later, we didn't need to write any corrections. Now, we prioritized corrections on impact to life safety, and even then, felt relatively safe in limiting our corrections. This guy had framed hundreds of houses, and none had any significant issues. These were more related to building longevity.
In smaller jurisdictions, we can make those kinds of investments in our contractors. Larger jurisdictions, it would require a substantial amount of coordination between inspectors to accomplish the same thing. I'm not sure it could work...
I just ordered the book from Amazon.Hey ICE, you should write a book of inspection anecdotes.
There is a BC inspector that wrote a book called "Building Inspector Memories" I believe, I found it quite entertaining.
The number of stories about people answering the door naked is hilarious. Im still waiting on my first, although I was inspecting a lingerie store and the owner showed me around in her bra. So that was cool.I just ordered the book from Amazon.
A rudest nudist?We have a few rudest resorts that we inspect for. Apparently everyone there were all born that way.