Thanks men... it's all interesting stuff and tis true I'm completely frustrated !!
But I suppose what I'm griping about really is the fact that when you're involved in any "large" job that involves Electrical contractors/M&E contractors god knows how many design teams /Arcitects /Consultants etc, then we become the tadpole at the end of the food chain swimming amongst sharks.
And it doesn't matter how much we spout the BS and tell everyone what their roles should be and what BS says we should all do, basically no one else gives a monkeys except us !
.... and apart from all that, it just seems quite difficult to apply this bit of the BS to a real world scenario....
Your frustrations as an alarm engineer mirror mine as a fire risk assessor. Invariably we come across half baked ill considered mix and match solutions to fire safety in which all contributors are responsible only for their element and nobody looks after the bigger picture and co-ordinates things to ensure that everybody is rowing in the same direction.
Sometimes the mistakes are so obvious and fundamental you cannot imagine why the qualified engineers do not pick it up and get it dealt with, usually the response is its someone elses problem and not in my contract. Nobody is thanked for rocking the boat.
No wonder I have no hair left and look 56 when I am really only 28.
I remember one top flight brand new football stadium with every possible bell and whistle - trouble was every body had taken their supply for their equipment from the same circuit and nobody had done the simple sums. I raised it from a fire point of view asking simple firemans questions and was roundly criticised - you are a fireman stick to fire, keep your nose out and leave the electrical side of things to us engineers. On the first match the circuit breaker melted, the floodlights cameras and PA all died.
Another industrial plant handling ethanol - the plant was beautiful but required zoning under the DSEAR Regs, nobody told the fire alarm designer of this simple fact, or the ventilation engineer who sourced his make up air for another area from the hazardous zones, and nobody took the sprinkler system flow into account when designing bunds.
Now- soap box out- What are the contributory factors?
Poor standards of design and project management, too much fragmentation and sub contracting for sure. But then
Do we still have Clerks of works?
Is the Building Control system part of the problem?
Or is it the Design and Build concept?
Do QA schemes for contractors really make any difference?
Are Approved inspectors in the pockets of the developers?
Do the different definitions and role of duty holders under the CDM Regs compared to those under the Fire Safety Order contribute?
Should the Designers, Principal Contractors and CDM Co-ordinators be defined as persons having control and held responsible under the Fire Safety Order at least for the warranty period of the building? Now that would make a difference!