1. Heat detectors in bedrooms had not the first thing to do with smoking in bedrooms. Trust me that is not relevant.
2. Mr Retty , Protest away but like MRs retty, who as a woman can multi task, try to think risk at the same time as you are protesting. I had never put you down as a "control" freak, but the issue is nothing to do with control it is about risk. You are not entirely free to do as you please in your home, as if you take your smoke alarms away, you will commit an offence under the building act, and be sent to the salt mines as a punisment, or worse still be sent to work in LFEPA. You are right, there is no legislation to require you to put AFD in your bedroom, same as there is no legislation requiring smoke detectors in bedrooms rather than heat detectors. And at last we agree. The AFd is for others, not the person in the room of origin. Heat detectors eat that objective many times over, so why on earth would you want smoke detectors.
3. Messey. What am I to do with you. I do my best to sort out your confusions, but it is a labour born only of desparation sometimes. If you had paid attention to the mind correction of your equality and diversity people,, of which there are 9989 in LFEPA, you would know that the one thing that really does matter in the crazy world in which we live is to try to give disabled people equivalence to able bodied people. In my humble opinion, this is infinitely more important than demeaning women by calling them "dear" as we do in scotland. It really is ever so simple. If you are in a hotel, and there is a fire in your room, you will jump out of bed raise the alarm and make pumps 45 (asuming it is only a small fire). Someone who needs to use a wheelchair cant do that. So to help them, we compensate by giving even earlier warning to give them the same chance as the you have. That is also what the Home Office recommended in the purple guide for exactly the same reason. The HMIs at the time actually understood what they were doing, unlike the new incumbents, not least because they asked for and sponsored the work that led to detectors in bedrooms, and had the research findings as did we when we wrote BS 5839-1 1988 and the later 2002 version. I am sorry if you think there is an anomaly in what I drafted, but I was trying to give disabled persons an enhanced standard of fire safety. You are also misinterpreting the BS by selectively choosing some bits without reading it in context. Read the whole thing, and you will find we point out the role of the L2 system in a sleeping risk in the text and in Annex A.
And there is one thing that is being missed: People at home die in bedrooms of fire origin, because they dont have PAT testing, regular room inspections, avoidance of portable heaters and electric blankets, and they smoke in bed. None of this is applicable to hotels, and guess what?

Well, surprise surprise NOBODY dies in the room of fire origin in UK hotels whatever type of detector is installed. OH sorry, I tell a lie. You lost one in London a year or two ago. He set fire to his clothes and even the greatest fire brigade in the whole of.... London couldnt save him. Oh and guess what? He had a smoke detector in his bedroom. If you want to save lives from fire, go down to Brixton and install smoke alarms in their homes, which is where people die, and stop worrying about people who demonstrably never die anyway.