Once again I would be grateful for any advice on the following problem.
A very large cement plant has about 20 major internal oil filled substations ranging from 66kv- 3.3kv and about 100 control panels throught a wide range of buildings. There are a number of internal and external cable chambers up to 4x4x3 metres and cable ducts up to 1m wide and 1m deep. The life risk is very sparse but the potential for business disruption enormous should a fire occur and develop undetected.
So they wish to instal automatic detection to give early warning of overheating or incipient fires. This will augment prevention procedures, including regular thermographic testing and oil testing.
I am trying to determine whether fire, infra red, flame, smoke or heat detection may be the best way to alert the control room giving an early warning of fire, but with the need to install a very extensive fire alarm system over about 20 acres of plant buildings, or whether to recommend temperature monitoring through a building management system, - cheaper, but a much less resilient networked system using existing BMS pvc cabling.
The client would prefer smoke detection but the the big issue is that the whole site is dusty and some areas extremely so. Has anybody encountered a similar situation or experience of protecting underground cable ducts, substations and cabinets?