Intumescent seals for life safety or property safety?
I was investigating a fire in a property that was separated into different flat units. The fire was in the ground floor flat and was impacting on the door between the flat and the stairway. The occupier of the upper flat staed that he had to jump past the flames that were emitting from the edge of the door in order to get past it as he made his escape. Witnesses confirmed that the fire alarm had been operating for 5 minutes before the first annoyed resident came to reset the system, saw the smoke and knocked on all the doors to clear the building. The building was clear within 8 minutes of the alarm sounding.
The building was protected by a BS 5839-1 L2 system which had been checked for compliance 7 days before the fire. The detector within the fire compartment was an ionisation smoke detector. My concern was how were flames emitting from the edge of a fire door within 8 minutes of the smoke alarm operating, such that occupants had to jump past the flames in order to escape?
I was drawn towards the NIST studies carried out in the States as a result of the number of peopple who were being killed in house fires when smoke detection systems were installed and functional.
The report pointed to a set of circumstances where an ionisation smoke detector would take 20 minutes longer to detect a smouldering fire than an optical detector would in the same circumstances. The fire ine this instance had been burning for a lot longer than 8 minutes, and the circumstances closely matched those of the NIST studies.
The intumescent strip had actuated which delayed the impact of the fire onto the stairway. This door did not, I believe, withstand fire for 30 minutes, as discussed in earlier posts, but it certainly lasted in the region of 20 minutes. The fact that occupants took those same 20 minutes to evacuate would support the need for strips for life safety. Or would at least support the need for justification not to work towards fitting them over a reasonable period.
Whilst not definitive in any sense of the word, my experience in this and other investigations leads me towards encouraging the installation of intumescent seals over a reasonable timescale unless there are extremely good reasons not to.