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Les,
Great response. Are you aware of anyone who makes longer 60 degree elbow with a gauge? I have been looking for the elbow with gage, so far no luck.
Again great response and good advise on Dave's writings. I would recommend Dave's book Firefighting Operations in High-rise and Standpipe Equipped Buildings.
Thanks,
Art
One of our challenges is that the pressure control component of the PRV is after the control valve. if you gate down the standpipe outlet with the hand wheel you do create a smaller effective orfice but the spring valve in the PRV opens to raise the discharge pressure. Its possible to gate down the max volume but almost impossible to reduce the operating pressure. One possible solution is using a hydrant gate or another appliance inline after the PRV to introduce friction and reduce pressures. This can significantly reduce flow, however, since a reduction of well over 50 PSI is "needed" for the 2.5"/SB operation.
Chief McGrails text is great and I have read it cover to cover. We have a City unique code issue (I think) which can throw a small kink in the "standard" operation.
Tom
Mike,
We have a system which is designed around "fully sprinklered" buildings and the thought is that we can use 1.75" hose lines and fog nozzles. I know the problems with this (1 meridian plaza). That being said, its the system we have.
One possibility is using 2.5" fog nozzles (and increased staffing on the line) as a first option. Although scaling in the standpipe will eventually clog the line Im sure.
At residential high rises, however, the 1.75" hose line seems reasonable as a FIRST line. If we have enough pressure to operate a small line, why not? The fire flow requirement is well within the capacity of the 1.75" for all but the largest open floor plan luxury flats.
Wind driven fires seem like the largest challenge to my low flow (150gpm) theory. That being said the fire service isn't advancing on wind driven fires in HR buildings, even with 2.5" lines. when you watch videos and read after action reports its quite clear that accelerated initial burn rates are reducing heat release rates due to fuel reduction prior to a successful attack.
Besides, a fog pattern is an improvement to a solid stream when it comes to "pushing back" at a pressure driven fire front. Coupled with PPV (Im not one of those PPV nuts) the fog line provides the greatest probability of pushing fire out of the public hallway and protecting the rest of the building if actual entry is not possible.
This is of course NOT a solution I would advocate for commercial high rises.
Tom
Thanks for the clarification Chief.
So it would seem like Tom would in fact need some way to gate the pressure, that is, if the PRV is set correctly.
You had mentioned in a post on another thread that FDNY sidesteps the PRV's, do you know of a way to accomplish this in the sort of building Tom described?
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