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FIRE SERVICE AND GENERAL FIRE SAFETY TOPICS => Technical Advice => Topic started by: kurnal on September 06, 2006, 06:55:40 AM

Title: Inergen systems losing gas
Post by: kurnal on September 06, 2006, 06:55:40 AM
One of my clients has 7 inergen systems installed and commissioned early this year. Not  a week goes by without  one or more cylinders losing their gas and needing replacement. I have been given all sorts of reasons- undertightening, overtightening, poor O rings,O rings fitted and not needed, O rings not fitted when needed, a bad batch of gauges.

Is this a general problem and is it just Inergen that seems so elusive?
Title: Inergen systems losing gas
Post by: Firedog on September 10, 2006, 09:17:58 AM
We had a similar problem with a FM 200 installation which was traced i understand to a pressure release valve being faulty after replacement  all has worked well and still is
Title: Inergen systems losing gas
Post by: Kevin M on May 23, 2007, 08:39:33 PM
inergen is like all high pressure gas cylinders used in fire suppresion,They need leak detection done on installation  thoroughly and  methodically '
each gauge has a o ring fitted to the bottle via a shreider valve ,link hoses and manifold hoses,al potential culprits,
There are thousands on site with no problems.
Title: Inergen systems losing gas
Post by: AnthonyB on May 24, 2007, 02:19:31 PM
since the original post I've seen various systems, yet only with Inergen ones i've seen cylinders low, even after recent services - although the overall %age is probably low, it does seem Inergen banks are more susceptible to this
Title: Inergen systems losing gas
Post by: kurnal on May 24, 2007, 10:35:09 PM
Thanks to all for your responses. My installations have settled down a bit- only 3 cylinders down on the last monthly audit, and only by about 7-10%. Many of the gauges were eventually replaced and this seemed to cure most of the problems.

I have also found that the cylinders are not firmly secured in their cradles (by design)  and that natural building resonances are causing them to move a little, and this has the effect of loosening the trigger pipe connections over time.