Insurance Engineer
REGISTERED
I wanted to pass onto to you the problem we are seeing with fire pumps connected to transfer switches not being tested. I had 2 this week one in the Northeast and one in the Midwest, at hospitals, that failed when tested. Both fire pumps had been in service for over 10 years, however never tested as per NFPA 25. In one case the pump was not connected to the generator, in the other it was connected BUT ran backwards when the load was transferred. NFPA 25 8.3.3.4 noted below is where testing is required. In 1 below "peak load" is when the pump is at 150% of the gpm rating. Pull the power to the utility side of the controller and see what happens. They should take all the readings, volts, amps, gpm, psi, rpm while running off the generator.
Hope this helps.
8.3.3.4 For installations having an automatic transfer switch, the following test shall be performed to ensure that the overcurrent protective devices (i.e., fuses or circuit breakers) do not open:
(1) Simulate a power failure condition while the pump is operating at peak load.
(2) Verify that the transfer switch transfers power to the alternate power source.
(3) Verify that the pump continues to perform at peak load.
(4) Remove the power failure condition, and verify that, after a time delay, the pump is reconnected to the normal
power source
Hope this helps.
8.3.3.4 For installations having an automatic transfer switch, the following test shall be performed to ensure that the overcurrent protective devices (i.e., fuses or circuit breakers) do not open:
(1) Simulate a power failure condition while the pump is operating at peak load.
(2) Verify that the transfer switch transfers power to the alternate power source.
(3) Verify that the pump continues to perform at peak load.
(4) Remove the power failure condition, and verify that, after a time delay, the pump is reconnected to the normal
power source