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Brandon

Safelincs
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Posts posted by Brandon

  1. There are radio-interlinked units manufactured by Ei Electronics that are battery operated and suitable to connect stables with a house. Just install alarms in the house as well as the stables and all alarms will go off at the same time. However, keep in mind that the smoke alarms in the stables will sound as well if you have a fire in the house or if you are testing the alarms. You might have to modify the sounder in the smoke alarms placed in the stables if this is an issue (careful, this might affect warranty and function)

  2. I guess we are talking radio-interlinked units: As standard 12 units can be connected. The system will accept more, however, when housecoding the alarms, the little LED light that indicates the number of units collected will not be able to show more than 12 units in the 'family'

  3. Hi

    Apart from being a legal and insurance requirement the main point is to ensure that fire extinguishers actually work and do not only look nice. The service engineer will also ensure that extinguishers are in the correct location, easy to reach and the right extinguisher for the risk at hand. The refill after five years has been designed to catch lining and rust problems.

    That all said we are currently introducing a new range from Britannia (Fireworld) that is guaranteed for ten years and can be self-maintained without service engineers. Watch this space!

  4. Water extinguishers do need refilling after 5 years and usually replacing after ten years (although you could have a pressure test carried out and the extinguisher repainted etc). The British standard does not recommend having an extinguisher older than ten years. It would therefore be advisable to replace the water extinguishers you have with new ones.

  5. I would recommend a heat detector in the kitchen as this would not cause false alarms from cooking fumes, I would also suggest an optical sensor in the hallway/living room downstairs as the heat alarm in the kitchen on its own will not detect a fire in any of the other rooms.

  6. The mains powered radio linked smoke alarms can be powered from the lighting circuits. In actual fact we do recommend this over the provision of a separate power spur, as it removes the temptation to flick the switch off in the fuse box if there is any problem with the smoke alarms.

  7. If you are a bed and breakfast has your local fire authority/officer informed you about which level of detection you have to have? Normally, they will ask you to conform to a certain Grade of the British Standard BS5839 pt6.

    Grade F - Battery operated smoke alarms.

    Grade D - Mains powered smoke alarms with battery backup and interlink. This option includes radio-interlinked mains powered smoke alarms

  8. To conform to the British Standard BS EN 3 you need to install red extinguishers. However, if your insurance does not stipulate this standard then stainless steel extinguishers can be installed and certified to the portable extinguisher maintenance standard BS5306 (where the engineer commissions and installs the units at your premises).

  9. There is an alarm called the Exit stopper door alarm (single and double) that is fitted to the fire door and once the exit door is opened the unit alarms until the alarm is reset by the key holder. With this product you can have a remote sounder that is sited away from the alarm so personnel in other parts of the building can be notified that the door has been opened.

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