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Purchase the book, it's a good reference book to use. However, I did the Fire Inspector 1 exam and in my opinion all you need is the codes and standards (NFPA 10, 25, 72, 101, 1, etc).jmc said:Occasionally I see where members share pdf files of codes/standards. Does anyone have a pdf of the subject code available for sharing?
It is several hundred pages, and costs $75.00 to purchase new from IFSTA. I lucked out and got a used copy in near-new condition from a used textbook website for $35.jmc said:Occasionally I see where members share pdf files of codes/standards. Does anyone have a pdf of the subject code available for sharing?
Good overview but you do not need it for the exam. It is quite a basic reference book. I took fire 1 & 2 and never opened it during the exams.permitguy said:When you see such documents being shared, they are generally either public information (such as a law adopted by a jurisdiction), or are being freely shared by the publisher (as is the case with ICC and NFPA making their codes available for free online).The publication you are referring to is not a code, but an informational textbook about performing fire inspections (educational info, best practices, etc.). It wasn't written in code language, and wasn't intended to be adopted by a jurisdiction as a law. To my knowledge, IFSTA hasn't made the publication available for free.
See the difference? If you want or need a copy of this publication, you need to purchase it, check it out from your local library, see if your own or a neighboring fire department has a copy you can borrow, etc.