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The un-answered question is what are the acceptable loss numbers before applying more and more regulationsfire deaths and property losses will remain a fact of life
I can go either way on residential sprinklers.incognito said:The fanatical RFS bunch must be a blissful group as they march in unison to the whim of NFPA and NFSA. Considering that the 2009 codes sold so poorly and the 2012 are not doing much better it is very clear what jurisdictions and legitimate code officials think of RFS. It is reprehensible that a special interest group was permitted to buy memberships and in turn saddle the ICC with this BS.
Because the higher occupant loads and the occupant's lack of familiarity with the building tells us that the cost of installation vs. lives saved does not constitute an unreasonable investment (well below 3 million dollars per life saved while residential sprinklers cost 38 million dollars per life saved). In jurisdictions that have mandatory sprinklers in single and two family homes the survivability goes up by .1% over a home with working smoke detectors. I would like to see sprinklers in every building, but common sense tells us that spending that much money for a .1% survivability increase should be a decision made by the owners, not a code requirement.cda said:I can go either way on residential sprinklers.Yes I prefer them to be there
I guess why not the same arguement for commercial buildings?? Why haven't the no sprinkler people stepped up and tried to get the commercial sprinkler requirement removed from the codes???
do you have a source link for those numbers???tmurray said:Because the higher occupant loads and the occupant's lack of familiarity with the building tells us that the cost of installation vs. lives saved does not constitute an unreasonable investment (well below 3 million dollars per life saved while residential sprinklers cost 38 million dollars per life saved). In jurisdictions that have mandatory sprinklers in single and two family homes the survivability goes up by .1% over a home with working smoke detectors. I would like to see sprinklers in every building, but common sense tells us that spending that much money for a .1% survivability increase should be a decision made by the owners, not a code requirement.
Commercial buildings required to have sprinklers are usually 12,000 sq ft or more, have a large occupancy load, or people that are not capable of self preservation.Why haven't the no sprinkler people stepped up and tried to get the commercial sprinkler requirement removed from the codes???
If it is commercial property (apartments/hotels) they typically have this right for anual inspections.cda said:ok is this a play on words???yes they are required, as in alot of cities and states.
But once installed, in private residence, what authority does an ahj have to go back and inspect for working detector??? Plus, would you want that law on the book??
MT,I personally would like the sprinkler requirement in R-1 and R-2 removed in buildings of 2 stories or less if each dwelling/sleeping unit has an egress door that leads directly to an exterior exit access that leads directly to an exit.
HOUSTON: Woman gets 80 years for deadly Texas day care fire | National | Bradenton HeraldRJJ said:Smoke VS Sprinklers! The debate starts a new!:inspctr
The building code is not ment to protect people from others incompetence."She was being paid to watch these children. She knew better," Baldassano said. "It's not the stove. It's not the refrigerator. It's not any parents' fault. It's nobody's fault but her own."