Has anyone seen fire curtains being used in a private residential premises?
It would have to be a pretty big house to require smoke curtains. But then this would be the sort of application that kurnal's talking about in his post above. I too have seen them suggested in spaces that are simply not appropriate for their installation (possibly by the same people - I have to say that some of the suggested applications sound spookily similar). Smoke curtains are appropriate for large spaces such as malls, auditoria (as mentioned above), warehouses and atria.
The smoke models that we use, including CFD, are not sufficiently accurate to be able to give us precise indications of exactly how deep smoke layers might be. In large spaces this inaccuracy can be overcome by allowing decent safety margins in the depths of the curtains. In small spaces we do not have the luxury of ample space to provide generous safety margins and this means that designs have no tolerance for inaccuracies in predictions of smoke behaviour.
The applicability of smoke curtains to large and small spaces is analogous to attempting trend analysis in large and small statistical samples. If we look at the annual figures for fire deaths nationally in the UK then we can see that there are natural fluctuations from year to year but that these are outweighed by the large numbers involved and we can see a true trend going one way or the other (hopefully down!). But if we look at the annual figures for fire deaths within a single county or city of the UK then the natural fluctuations have a much greater significance and can swamp any underlying trend that might exist, making that trend impossible to identify. Attempting trend, or 'regression', analysis on a small sample is more than a waste of time, it is misleading. Similarly, having absolute faith in smoke calculations in small spaces is more than a waste of time, it is dangerous.
This issue of smoke curtains billowing out due to fire pressures is well researched and there is guidance on how to compensate for it. Have a look at BS EN 12101 part 1. This also talks about tests and maintenance and so on but I think it leaves the issue of testing intervals to the manufacturers.
Chris, if the manufacturer has stated on the phone that weekly testing is suitable but won't put it in writing, I would put it in writing for him/her by documenting his/his statement in the log book or fire strategy, and then I would adhere to a weekly testing regime.
Stu