Not getting at you personally Civvy
I never take it personally. It is all discussion, advice and opinions.
but do we not aim for an evacuation to be completed in a few minutes? Even up to 10 mins would be very generous when you consider the level of detection installed in building nowadays.
We need to consider the time between the alarm being raised and the time that persons will leave their room. In hotels and other sleeping risks this can be quite a long time. There have been some human behaviour studies done and an alarm siren/bell is not a particularly effective method of letting people know what is happening. Pre-movement times (time between hearing an alarm and actually moving) are quoted in PD7974-6 as >20 mins for a poorly managed hotel occupancy, (i.e. probably 'less competent' or no staff on site, no prior fire instructions, expecting you to evacuate yourself) and IIRC similar times are quoted in D.Canters book "Fires and Human Behaviour". Granted, not all hotels are badly managed, but being an FSO I always go for the worse case scenario for an example.
(And also bear in mind that we may lose a few minutes before the activation of the alarm due to Toddy's heat detectors being in the affected room.)
Something to consider is that if I ended up in coroners court over a decision I made then I need to be able to justify that decision. "Colin Todd says it should be ok" is not a good defense, unless you actually
are Colin Todd with your list of letters after your name and a head full of statistics and years of experience. (And good reasoned arguments of course.)
Just to append to this:
TW, I think the point Colin is making that the 20 or 30 minutes comes purely from the test, which pretty much starts at flashover conditions. There can be a considerable incubation/smouldering period before the fire reaches anything like flashover conditions. (A good excuse for SD if there ever was one, but thats a matter for 50 other threads entirely...
) so from the point of ignition there may potentially be 5-15 minutes before anything like good flames are produced and the fire starts to really get hold, and even then a delay until flashover which may even require a window to break. The old test either wasn't as severe, or had lighter requirements, and the old doors could survive THAT test for 30 minutes. They changed the test, and the strips became necessary for the doorset to survive
the test for the allotted time. So where we have the tendency to think of a 30 minute corridor, it is not really a 30 minute corridor, it is a corridor made up of materials that survive various specific tests for 30 minutes, the actual time it survives in a specific fire will vary depending on many potential different situations. It could be less, it could be more.