Hi Willo,
kurnal's right that for this stuff to stay inside your head instead of evaporating away you have to be in a position where you will use it, not every day but from time to time at least. Having said that, what most delegates at Moreton take away with them is an excellent grounding in the subject and an enduring confidence cultivated by being immersed in smoke control for two weeks. Yes, back at their desks on the Monday morning after the course the real world comes back to hit them hard and smoke control is filed away in some cupboard in the brain, but a lot of it sticks there and can be retrieved if required in the future.
But it's not a cheap course (getting on for £3k). It would be in your employer's interest to send you on it if you were dealing with such schemes on their behalf. It would be in your own interest to finance it only if you were in the business of fire engineering and would be able to recoup your money through jobs that you pick up.
The course is not aimed specifically at enforcement officers any more than any other group. Each time it is run though, it is attended mainly by enforcing FRS officers, and so this tends to give the courses a slant towards the enforcing officer's role. Having said that, if any designers or fire engineers come on the course then their point of view is catered for just as much as the enforcing officers'. Indeed, where there are delegates from different roles within the fire safety world the course is more balanced and gives attendees a more rounded perspective on the subject matter. As a non FRS delegate you would be welcomed onto the course and well catered for.
The FPA don't really do an equivalent course but have got courses that cover some of the same ground. From my personal and reasonably intimate experience of them I would judge their courses to be geared towards theory and away from practical application. It is easy to design a course from reading the theory in a book but it is more difficult to make the course relevant and pertinent for the delegates' needs if the course designers and instructors do not have practical experience of applying the principles in the real world.
University of Greenwich offer a week long course in fire modelling and this gives a good basic understanding of computational fluid dynamics (CFD) which complements the Moreton smoke control course well. Greenwich course is about £1k. And you cannot realistically operate in the world of smoke control with a grasp of CFD.
The thick sandwich part time course that UCLAN offer is not what it used to be I've heard. It was never great but it was reasonable. I believe you still have to attend for 8 weeks a year and I think it lasts 5 years now.
If you want a qualification out of it, you're best going for a full degree. If you want a good practical handle on the subject you're best going for the Moreton course or do as Civvy says and get reading.
You could go to
www.smokeplume.co.uk and download the spreadsheet and mess around with it for a day or two. It is designed to assist you as you progress through it and you will have difficulty breaking it. Read the simple instructions on the download page, fill in the yellow boxes and see where it takes you. To understand it fully you really need the Moreton course that complements it but see how you get on.
In the new year (two years late!) this spreadsheet will evolve into an online application that will be broader in its scope and applicability whilst remaining user friendly. If you register with the site you will be notified when the new software becomes available and may be invited to be a beta tester of the new software.
Stu