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A smooth bore nozzle is the prefered weapon of selection for standpipe operations, whether a hi-rise or a warehouse for different reasons. One is the debris found in standpipes, if you have ever gone on a run where the sprinkler system has activated, what did the water look and smell like? Stagnant water sitting in a standpipe system will be full of debris from the pipe. Another concern is the stuff that people put in the standpipes, in some areas people have been know to hide items (needles, drugs, etc.) in a standpipe. How many times have you seen FDC's that are missing caps and what has been put into it, rocks, paper, etc. All of the these things have the potential to clog up our nozzles, the smooth bore gives us the best chance in passing those items through.
You mentioned the reach and penetration of a smooth bore, many of the areas in hi-rise or standpipe operations are large uncompartmentalized areas, for those large areas you need the reach, penetration and gpm produced by a smooth bore. As Jason Gennaro mentioned the psi needed to operate the combo nozzle to get the appropriate gpm is often not available in standpipe operations. With a smooth bore you can get adequate gpm at lower nozzle pressures. Some type of device that measures the pressure at the standpipe is recommended.
As for where you make your connections, you always want to make your connection at least one floor below your fire floor. Connecting on the fire floor creates some potential safety issues, often times you will find the standpipes on the floor, not it the stairwell, if you cannot contain the fire and the fire extends to the hall you have the potential of the fire burning up your line or firefighters in trouble trying to follow a hoseline out will still be in the hall and not the stairwell. You have to be carefull stretching to much hose up the stairwell above the fire floor also, if fire has taken the hall and you open the door to the fire floor, the flame, heat and smoke are going to extend up the stairwell.
Hope this helps,
Stay Safe Brother!
On our high rise packs we have Task Force Tips low pressure combo nozzles. We've got the ones that operate at 50PSI and flow like 70-180GPM. The reason we have them is because a few years ago a neighboring department looked at their high-rise pack and determined that the nozzles require 100PSI for an effective stream. Being that most of the standpipe systems aren't getting 100PSI at the floor connection that proved to be a huge problem! There's more to the story but it refers to an incident that I'm not going to discuss.
2. We have the same SOP for high-rise operations.
I have one suggestion for your high-rise pack. Being that all high-rise structures have different standpipe systems and pressures it's best to have something that tells you what pressure you have at the floor connection. We use a water thief with a pressure gauge. The water thief allows you to run additional lines on the fire floor without turning off the system. In addition, the pressure gauge allows you to see what the standpipe is flowing so you can increase or decrease pressure to your handlines for safety. Here's a pic:
Jason
jason,
Who is the manufacturer of the water thief in your picture? I like that concept vs. the gated wye with only 1 3/4" outlets. Thanks for the info!
Jason Gennaro said:On our high rise packs we have Task Force Tips low pressure combo nozzles. We've got the ones that operate at 50PSI and flow like 70-180GPM. The reason we have them is because a few years ago a neighboring department looked at their high-rise pack and determined that the nozzles require 100PSI for an effective stream. Being that most of the standpipe systems aren't getting 100PSI at the floor connection that proved to be a huge problem! There's more to the story but it refers to an incident that I'm not going to discuss.
2. We have the same SOP for high-rise operations.
I have one suggestion for your high-rise pack. Being that all high-rise structures have different standpipe systems and pressures it's best to have something that tells you what pressure you have at the floor connection. We use a water thief with a pressure gauge. The water thief allows you to run additional lines on the fire floor without turning off the system. In addition, the pressure gauge allows you to see what the standpipe is flowing so you can increase or decrease pressure to your handlines for safety. Here's a pic:
Jason
Jason, I like that you are using a device to give you indication of pressure on the discharge side of the standpipe outlet however, I have some concerns with the water thief set up.
1) When you are using a water thief in the manner in the photograph the 2 lines require drastically different pressures. so although there is a guage are you pumping for the 1 3/4 or 2 1/2?
2) The use of 2 1/2 hose and 50 psi nozzles are a terrific low pressure attack line combination. When two - three lines are flowing thru a water thief, wye or manifold device, higher pressures will be required (up to 25 psi) that the outlet may not have available. Although the outlet you have photographed is not a PRV or PRD other factors could give you less than desired pressures at the outlet. Remember 1 Meridian Plaza had an estimated outlet pressure of 45 psi and NFPA 14 only requires 65 psi residual for buildings build pre 93'. With 150 of 2 1/2 (15 psi friction loss) plus a 50 psi nozzle you are already at 65psi. There simply may not be enough to add other devices
In summary my recommendation would be to use a simple 2 1/2 x 2 1/2 inline pressure guage with one attack line operating. Stretch the 2nd line from the next floor below at another outlet. Each line has its own outlet and pressure guage, just like operating off the pumper. After all you would not operate a 2 1/2 and 1 3/4 off the same outlet of the engine would you?
Respectfully,
Daryl
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