1. Wizzy. There is nothing certain in life other than death, taxes and chewing of gum by the inspecting officers of a large metropolitan fire and rescue service. So, I can offer no assurances of anything. I tend to meet fire with fire, and the postings in this thread are mostly along the lines of I can't understand it , so it must be rubbish, rather than I can't understand it, could someone explain. I find this arrogant and ignorant. I would love to know why the universe is expanding, but find books on quantum physics very difficult to understand, but I tend not to be-rate them and make stupid comments about them such as certain posters, other than your goodself, have made. Given that the standard was endorsed by just about every organization that is anything in the fire world, I find it difficult to believe that there is a fundamental flaw in the standard, rather than a flaw in the capacity of some people (other than your goodself, who merely have some difficulty with the practical engineering of some of the recommendations) to understand quite basic fire safety principles that I thought were adequately explained in the commentary of the clauses (which is why, when invited by BSI to write a guide to the code of practice, I thought there would be no market for it).
2. I have been doing public half day courses in BS 7273-4 for some time, and training is 20% of the turnover of our consulting practice. Under our ISO 9000 system, the delegate feedback on every course we do is independently analysed. At last count, delegate satisfaction was running at around 90% across all the courses we do. Our last customer complaint was in 2006, and related to lack of political correctness in describing how an optical smoke detector works (which I still maintain is related to the fact that women can never see to drive through fog because they never dip the bleeding headlights). The view I take is that the lady in question will now never forget how an optical smoke detector works AND she will dip her headlights when she drives through fog, making the roads of Britain safer for the rest of us to drive on (and all this included in the course fee).
3. You can have as long as you want for the course. If you wish to pay for a day, that's fine too. We can spend some of it talking about Joanna Lumley's legs, as we will probably run out of things to say about BS 7273-4, since understanding the recs is easy as falling of a log (albeit that going away and engineering them may take some time and effort). I find Joanna more interesting than BS 7273-4, though as she ages it becomes more and more a close run thing.
4 Alas, it is not company practice, to do free offers as incentive to buy training, and since, whether we sell a half day course or not will make little difference to the company shareholders, its not something I am inclinded to do. Equally, I cannot believe anybody has difficulty understanding the clause you describe, particularly as we drew a picture to support it. If you look at the drawing, the clause is prefectly clear. Not only that, but that very clause was discussed in depth with a security body to make sure they could understand it before we finalized it. It is a bit tricky to comply with, but then it is only a RELAXATION of a previous recommendation of BS 7807, which the fire alarm industry (and no doubt ex enforcers selling their expertise as consultants) seemed to ignore, so we made it less onerous.
As I am now very bored with this subject, please contact us if you wish to have some training for WIZZYCO at a favourable rate. Otherwise, to be honest, I feel sure if you just spend a little more time going through the standard, it will all fall into place and you can save WIZZYCO money. Joking apart, I do hate to take fees for something that does not really need specialist input, but if you feel you really do want that, you are welcome to buy a course.