Well, the themral coupling should function, yes, but in order to have fire protection, the water must hit the deflector at a pressure such that it disperses.I've never seen a 350,000 gal tower before, but as I posted previously, 180,000 gal is not unreasonable.
Agree. But flow is equally as important as pressure.
This does not conform to my experience. Cite please? A sprinkler head will "function" at almost 0 flow and 0 pressure, i.e. the link will fuze, the glycerine will burst, etc. It just needs adequate flow and pressure to protect the occupancy.
For most industrial systems, this is at or near 95 psi. Much lower than that, and the water dribbles out in a fashion that does not allow for the cooling action of evaporation. Many manufacturers recommend 175 psi, as mentioned in NFPA 13.
http://www.globesprinkler.com/files/A-652.pdf
But in practice 100 PSI in the line seems to be sufficient.
I'm afraid most of my experience is hands-on as well. We run at about 130 PSI in our lines, because of the loss of pressure due to friction and line length. It ensures at least 100 PSI at the heads.
Maybe you were thinking of residential sprinklers?
Low flow heads flow less water, so yes, you would need more head to flow as much water to the same area, but you can run at a lower water pressure. Less pressure means less water per second. Less water per second means less extinguishing capabilities..
Again, I question the 75 psi statement. The rest of the statement sounds like you are saying with "low flow" heads (whatever they are) you have to decrease the sq. ft. coverage/head?? Please explain what you mean.
Of course. But what does this have to do with water flow/pressure/extinguishing capability?
Looking over some of the manufacturers, I see they do not offer the low-flow heads anymore. Maybe the revamp of NFPA 13 did them in. It looks like the 175 PSI head is standard now, with a high pressure version at 300PSI.*shrug* I might have outdated information about those. We never really used them anyway.
Which was the kind of system I was thinking aboutGood point. Hadn't considered that.
Possibly, but my experience is that you just take suction from the city underground main (assuming you have a reliable supply there), and then provide a booster pump at regular intervals as you increase elevation
You create suction, which can water hammer a system. The tank creates a reservior that cushions this intial suction, thus reducing the hammer effect. A water hammer is a wave created within a pipe caused by sudden changes in water pressure. If you suddenly pressurize(or depressurize) a pipe full of water, it creates a wave that transverses the length of the pipe. This wave can cause damage and even break water mains.Not sure what you are talking about here exactly.
That, too!Agree. see above.
Actually, if you have a gravity system, you just use a small fill pump to continually make up for any pipe leakage, etc. In a fire situation, once the gravity tank is empty, you are SOL as that little pump is ineffective.
>!<Actually, the testing on a wet-pipe sprinkler system as far as water usage is concerned is rather small. The two inch drain where the riser enters the building is probably tested monthly for about 30 seconds. The inspector's test connection (which simulates flow from one sprinkler head) is probably tested twice a year.
Twice a year?! Every month! The inspector's test and the 2 in riser drain ought to be tested monthly. It's not a lot of water, but it adds up, especially with the number of systems you're going to have in a building the size of the Towers, and when you talk about damping effects.
Yes, but it rather negates the idea of flushing a system.On large systems, there are sectional valves that can be closed to avert having to drain an entire system.
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