Thanks Wiz and Nearlythere. Your responses echo my own thoughts to some extent.
On one hand yes I do have a legal responsibility as a landlord and should do everything reasonably practicable to address a problem which might put my tenants at risk even if it is the early hours of the morning.
On the other who is to say what is reasonable, other than a judge and jury?
The reason I ask is two fold really. One harks back to the lack of info out there for responsible persons on what they should do when such a fault occurs. Wiz your response is exactly what i tell my punters they should do in such situations, but you seldom find that written down anywhere in official guidance.
Some of those punters understand the risk associated with leaving a sleeping risk overnight without AFD coverage, others seem to wing it and are happy to leave the system in fault til the next day, or even the next week, not knowing if the fault is serious.
I was wondering if I was being over the top, and what others thought.
I think we would all agree leaving a fire alarm system in fault for more than 24 hours is a bit naughty...(?) or would your response be thus:- If fitted correctly there should no general fault with a fire alarm system that totally disables is capability to function (unless both power supplies have been disconnected, or key components has been damaged or vandalised?? )
In other words, does a general "fault" light showing on the panel is normally indicative of something minor