Kurnal I've now put the brake on, and hopefully it's stopped you from spiralling away!!!!!!!
=)
With reference to both Kurnal's and Mike's recent posts; Can any one person know everything?
I mean, for example, is it possible for a Fire Officer to understand the electronic principles used in fire alarms in depth, or the problems in installing cables or for a fire alarm engineer to understand how various materials burn or in-depth building regulations.
Can any one type of person have the passion to learn, in reasonable depth, all these different disciplines? I'd like to think there is and I'd really appreciate having them around as a source of answers! But I wonder if it is too rare a species that can know and do it all to a sufficiently in-depth level! As Kurnal said it might then be better to have a reasonable level of knowledge in everything necessary, than an in-depth knowledge in one subject
I love Mike's byline of ' if the left don't get you the right hand will!' I know what he means and there always seems that if you follow BS 5839 someone will say 'but why haven't you taken into consideration the local guidelines produced by the Red Watch of the Isle of Nowhere's FRS recommending that if the wind is in the west on alternate Thurdsdays then MCP's can be mounted at a height of 795mm without an Agreed Variation!
Is it really impossible to incorporate the important parts of every discipline in respect of fire alarm and detection systems and incorporate them in one set of recommendations? Forget the fact that they would probably be impossible to interpret, but at least it would be a start and then maybe training and qualifications could be based on the 'holistic' approach.
Mike, having no training in building regs. can you please advise me, if 20m is obviously too far a travel distance to an exit from a room, what is the maximum such travel distance? And what happens in big areas such as airports? I'm sure I've often been more than 20m away from an exit in such places.
Again Mike, if BS5839 seems to allow no detection in the analogy we worked on, but you confirm that building regs may demand it anyway, why didn't the latest revision of BS incorporate it as standard to also comply with the building regs(assuming that it is not a more recent building reg)?
Guys, thanks for all your input on these questions. I'm enjoying it and I'm sure that David, who started it all is interested as well. I'm also pretty sure that I'm not the only one who is getting fed up with that unexpected 'right' crashing in just after I've avoided the 'left'!