Hi Willo,
There is plenty of guidance but as you are starting to see it isn't consistent.
Remember this, the subject is relatively new, lacks historical data and is still subject to people's evolving and differing ideas.
The tests that are required to evaluate new or improved models are very expensive and can only be undertaken at a few sites.
The models that are out there are probably a little conservative (i.e. erring on the side of safety).
There is diminishing motivation to go to the expense of developing more accurate models as the current range of models seem to be put to cost-effective use time and again and seem adequate for current building practices.
The buildings in which the current models are used for design of systems are all quite new, they are generally relatively expensive buildings and therefore relatively well managed. This means that they tend not to have fires in them anyway.
No one is quite sure if we are getting away with it for the time being whilst the systems are not up to the job or, as should be hoped (and I generally believe) , the systems are perfectly suitable to meet their objectives.
The question is, or will be, can these buildings, built to what sometimes appear to be ad hoc standards, stand the test of time.
All current models are guesses but they are the best guesses we have if we want to build the way we do. The science, and I use that term reservedly, is young and for the time being we have little choice but to put up with the vagaries of youth.
And it's not just the models that can be controversial but also the acceptance criteria - I know of at least one building where it is anticipated that, during a fire, people will have to make their way some distance through smoky conditions with visibility down to 10m - but not just a few people, as might be intuitively acceptable in a block of flats say, but thousands upon thousands of people - I can't see it working personally. All I can see is a disaster waiting to happen.
We will know in about 40 years time when the buildings are old and mis-managed and when they've had a few fires.
Ask me again then.
Stu
ps Having said all that, with judicious application of the models and care taken over all other fire safety matters, we can provide buildings that are safe.