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How
Sprinklers Work |
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Fire Sprinklers are simple devices that are individually
operated directly by the heat from a fire - as is shown
in the diagram below right.
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When a fire starts a plume of hot gases rise to the
ceiling. If a sprinkler is present, a glass bulb or
solder link gets hot and at a specific temperature
(typically 68°C) breaks releasing the cap and allowing
water to flow onto a specially designed diffuser.
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The
diffuser breaks up the water flow into carefully
controlled droplets, which penetrate the fire plume and
cool the burning material to below its ignition point,
thus putting out the fire.
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Only the sprinkler/s directly over the fire are operated
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all of them!.
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The
sprinklers are connected to pipework, usually filled
with water, which is supplied either from the water
mains or from a storage tank via a pump.
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When a sprinkler operates the flow of water in the
pipework operates a flow switch, which in turn operates
an alarm system.
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The
flow of water is small, typically less than 1/100th the
water used by the Fire Brigade.
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Sprinklers do not go off accidentally and are only
triggered by the heat from real fires.
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Sprinklers are very reliable and less then 1:16,000,000
exhibit any form of manufacturing defect.
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When hot enough the cap will fall
away and the sprinkler will spray water on the fire.
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Because the water immediately cools
the hot fire gases, the other sprinklers usually won't
open because there would not be enough heat to break the
bulb or melt their fusible element.
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If the fire is so hot that one
sprinkler cannot handle it alone, hot gases will reach
the next nearest sprinkler. Then that sprinkler would
open to stop the fire.
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This design of opening only when
there is enough heat limits the number of sprinklers to
what is needed to stop the fire.
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Fire records over the past century
show that 93 percent of fires were handled by only one
sprinkler. In the remaining cases, two sprinklers
handled an additional four percent. and it took only
three sprinklers to handle nearly all of the remaining 3
percent.
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Keep in mind that these figures
include large warehouses with high piles of combustible
goods, some of them very combustible. In these cases,
more than one sprinkler may be necessary to spray enough
water to absorb the tremendous heat generated by the
fire.
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In residential settings, the
likelihood of more than one sprinkler opening is very
rare, and the number of fires controlled by one
sprinkler is much closer to 100 percent.
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The water spray from the sprinkler
cools the fire gases over the fire. When the temperature
of the burning material drops to below its combustion
temperature, it can no longer burn and the fire goes
out.
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Responding firefighters will shut
off the sprinkler only once they are sure that the fire
is completely out.
- Right is a close-up view of a ceiling-mounted fire
sprinkler.
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- The exposed part (what you can see on the ceiling)
of this sprinkler measures 1 5/8" long and 1 1/4" wide.
Many residential fire sprinklers are recessed into the
ceiling so that as little as 1/2" is visible and some
are completely recessed and covered with flat caps that
match the ceiling.
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The threaded end at the top screws
into a water pipe in the ceiling and is not visible from
below.
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The cap/seal prevents water from
flowing out. The glass bulb holds the cap/seal in place
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The glass bulb is filled with
liquid and a small bubble.
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Heat from a fire will expand the
liquid and break the bulb. The cap/seal falls away and
water will stream out.
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The water stream hits the
deflector, which breaks it into a spray of tiny
droplets, which cools the source of the fire thereby
extinguishing it.
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Sprinklers come in
a variety of designs to suit any application and these
include pendent, recessed, concealed and sidewall
sprinklers. See pictures As a result a residential
sprinkler system is usually completely concealed within the
walls and floors of a property and so goes unnoticed by
visitors - as can been seen on the left.
Can you spot the sprinkler? |

Concealed sprinkler.
Only the white disc shows below ceiling |

Recessed sprinkler.
Sprinklers can be factory supplied in any
colour or finish |
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