Kurnal, because it was not considered tolerable, it does not mean that it was considered intolerable either. You must learn to read things before you hit that reply button and go off on one of your rants. I said it was NOT CONSIDERED -as in CONSIDERED AT ALL.
The concern about Grade A, as Cleveland is trying to tell you, is that it will be used in HMOs, where clearly it is totally unacceptable to run a landlord system off a pre-payment meter. As I keep trying to tell you, this has been a well known issue for EHOs for, to my certain knowledge, more than 10 years ago, when it first began to raise its head.
With regard to dwellings, we DID consider, the issue of pre-payment meters, in defining the minimum standby duration. More specifically, we were concerned to know whether capacitors were ok, given that they cannot last anything like as long as standby batteries. Rather than rush off with opinions based, I acknowledge, with lots of good intent but no research or analysis, as I so often read here, we held discussions with social researchers to find out about patterns of pre-payment meter use by low income vulnerable groups. That is how we came by 72 hours, which is achievable with capacitors. Batteries will last way way longer, but long income families often use pre-payment meters in a manner known to social scientists as cycling, whereby they intentionally let meters run out at certain times, and then use them again when they want the electricity. We were advised that 72 hours would be adequate duration and a benefit of capacitors that trades off against their much much shorter standby time is that they recharge quite quickly.
The commentary in BS 5839-6 kind of explains this. You will also find pages of explanation in my text book on domestic fire detection and BS 5839-6, which I will gladly supply to you at author's discount so that you dont need to lie awake worrying about it. It refers to the research we did and the fact that anyone suffering disconnections for longer periods lie right at the tail of the statistical distribution, but if they are an issue, you make sure that the smoke alarm has a standby battery rather than a bank of capacitors, which will nearly always be the case anyway.
After that, we never considered the issue and did not revisit in when we had to address Grade A. It does not mean that there is a problem, nor that there is a need for people to go buying additional battery operated devices. It is just that the concern realted to HMOs and pre-payment meters-hence the attnetion was focussed on Grade A.
(By the way smoke alarms are not SELV, so you need to revisit your electrical engineering CPD.)