Source: http://docplayer.net/1615611-Section-13850-28-31-00-fire-detection-and-alarm-system-engineering-specification-50-point-intelligent-communicating-fire-detection-system.html
Timestamp: 2016-12-10 14:58:50
Document Index: 307593153

Matched Legal Cases: ['ART 1', 'ART 2', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 2', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1', 'ART 1']

⭐SECTION ( ) FIRE DETECTION AND ALARM SYSTEM ENGINEERING SPECIFICATION 50 - POINT INTELLIGENT COMMUNICATING FIRE DETECTION SYSTEM
SECTION ( ) FIRE DETECTION AND ALARM SYSTEM ENGINEERING SPECIFICATION 50 - POINT INTELLIGENT COMMUNICATING FIRE DETECTION SYSTEM
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1 SECTION ( ) FIRE DETECTION AND ALARM SYSTEM ENGINEERING SPECIFICATION 50 - POINT INTELLIGENT COMMUNICATING FIRE DETECTION SYSTEM PART 1 GENERAL 1.1. DESCRIPTION: A. This section of the specification includes the furnishing, installation, connection and testing of the microprocessor controlled, intelligent reporting fire alarm equipment required to form a complete, operative, coordinated system. It shall include, but not be limited to, alarm initiating devices, alarm notification appliances, Fire Alarm Control Panel (FACP), auxiliary control devices, annunciators, and wiring as shown on the drawings and specified herein. B. The fire alarm system shall comply with requirements of NFPA Standard No. 72 for Local Protected Premises Signaling Systems except as modified and supplemented by this specification. The system field wiring shall be supervised either electrically or by software-directed polling of field devices. 1. The Secondary Power Source of the fire alarm control panel will be capable of providing at least 24 hours of backup power with the ability to sustain 5 minutes in alarm at the end of the backup period. C. The fire alarm system shall be manufactured by an ISO 9001 certified company and meet the requirements of BS EN9001: ANSI/ASQC Q D. The FACP and peripheral devices shall be manufactured 100% by a single U.S. manufacturer (or division thereof). E. Underwriters Laboratories Inc. (UL) - USA: UL 38 UL 217 UL 228 UL 268 UL 268 UL 346 UL 464 UL 521 UL 864 UL 1481 UL 1610 UL 1638 UL 1971 UL 2017 Manually Actuated Signaling Boxes Smoke Detectors, Single and Multiple Station Door Closers-Holders for Fire Protective Signaling Systems Smoke Detectors for Fire Protective Signaling Systems A Smoke Detectors for Duct Applications Waterflow Indicators for Fire Protective Signaling Systems Audible Signaling Appliances Heat Detectors for Fire Protective Signaling Systems Standard for Control Units for Fire Protective Signaling Systems Power Supplies for Fire Protective Signaling Systems Central Station Burglar Alarm Units Visual Signaling Appliances Signaling Devices for Hearing Impaired General-Purpose Signaling Devices and System2 1. The FACP shall be ANSI 864, Ninth Edition Listed. Systems listed to ANSI 864, 8th edition (or previous revisions) shall not be accepted. F. The installing company shall employ NICET (minimum Level II Fire Alarm Technology) technicians on site to guide the final check-out and to ensure the systems integrity VOICE PANEL DESCRIPTION: A. This section of the specification includes the furnishing, installation, connection and testing of the microprocessor controlled voice evacuation control panel. B. The voice evacuation panel shall comply with NFPA 72 requirements. C. The installing company shall employ NICET (minimum Level II Fire Alarm Technology) technicians on site to guide the final check-out and to ensure the systems integrity SCOPE: A. An intelligent, microprocessor-controlled, fire alarm detection system shall be installed in accordance to the project specifications and drawings. B. A microprocessor-controlled voice evacuation control panel shall be installed in accordance with the project specifications and drawings. C. Basic Performance: 1. Alarm, trouble and supervisory signals from all intelligent reporting devices shall be encoded on NFPA Style 4 (Class B) Signaling Line Circuits (SLC). 2. Initiation Device Circuits (IDC) shall be wired Class A (NFPA Style D) as part of an addressable device connected by the SLC Circuit. 3. Notification Appliance Circuits (NAC) shall be wired Class A (NFPA Style Z) as part of an addressable device connected by the SLC Circuit. 4. All circuits shall be power-limited, UL864 9 th edition requirements. 5. A single ground fault or open circuit on the system Signaling Line Circuit shall not cause system malfunction, loss of operating power or the ability to report an alarm when wire NFPA Style 6/7. 6. Alarm signals arriving at the main FACP shall not be lost following a primary power failure or outage of any kind until the alarm signal is processed and recorded. 7. NAC speaker circuits shall be arranged such that there is a minimum of one speaker circuit per floor of the building or smoke zone whichever is greater. 8. NAC speaker circuits and control equipment shall be arranged such that loss of any one (1) speaker circuit will not cause the loss of any other speaker circuit in the system. D. BASIC SYSTEM FUNCTIONAL OPERATION3 When a fire alarm condition is detected and reported by one of the system initiating devices, the following functions shall immediately occur: 1. The system Alarm LED on the FACP shall flash. 2. A local sounder with the control panel shall sound. 3. A backlit 80-character LCD display on the FACP shall indicate all information associated with the fire alarm condition, including the type of alarm point and its location within the protected premises. 4. In response to a fire alarm condition, the system will process all control programming and activate all system outputs (alarm notification appliances and/or relays) associated with the point(s) in alarm. Additionally, the system shall send events to a central alarm supervising station via either dial-up over PSTN or Internet or Intranet via PSDN or virtual private network SUBMITTALS A. General: 1. Two copies of all submittals shall be submitted to the Architect/Engineer for review. 2. All references to manufacturer's model numbers and other pertinent information herein is intended to establish minimum standards of performance, function and quality. Equivalent compatible UL-listed equipment from other manufacturers may be substituted for the specified equipment as long as the minimum standards are met. 3. For equipment other than that specified, the contractor shall supply proof that such substitute equipment equals or exceeds the features, functions, performance, and quality of the specified equipment. B. Shop Drawings: 1. Sufficient information, clearly presented, shall be included to determine compliance with drawings and specifications. 2. Include manufacturer's name(s), model numbers, ratings, power requirements, equipment layout, device arrangement, complete wiring point-to-point diagrams, and conduit layouts. 3. Show annunciator layout, configurations, and terminations. C. Manuals: 1. Submit simultaneously with the shop drawings, complete operating and maintenance manuals listing the manufacturer's name(s), including technical data sheets. 2. Wiring diagrams shall indicate internal wiring for each device and the interconnections between the items of equipment. 3. Provide a clear and concise description of operation that gives, in detail, the information required to properly operate the equipment and system. D. Software Modifications 1. Provide the services of a qualified technician to perform all system software modifications, upgrades or changes. Response time of the technician to the site4 shall not exceed 4 hours. 2. Provide all hardware, software, programming tools and documentation necessary to modify the fire alarm system on site. Modification includes addition and deletion of devices, circuits, zones and changes to system operation and custom label changes for devices or zones. The system structure and software shall place no limit on the type or extent of software modifications on-site. Modification of software shall not require power-down of the system or loss of system fire protection while modifications are being made GUARANTY: All work performed and all material and equipment furnished under this contract shall be free from defects and shall remain so for a period of at least one (1) year from the date of acceptance. The full cost of maintenance, labor and materials required to correct any defect during this one year period shall be included in the submittal bid MAINTENANCE: A. Maintenance and testing shall be on a semi-annual schedule or as required by the local AHJ. A preventive maintenance schedule shall be provided by the contractor describing the protocol for preventive maintenance. The schedule shall include: 1. Systematic examination, adjustment and cleaning of all detectors, manual fire alarm stations, control panels, power supplies, relays, waterflow switches and all accessories of the fire alarm system. 2. Each circuit in the fire alarm system shall be tested semiannually. 3. Each smoke detector shall be tested in accordance with the requirements of NFPA 72. B. As part of the bid/proposal, include a quote for a maintenance contract to provide all maintenance, tests, and repairs described below. Include also a quote for unscheduled maintenance/repairs, including hourly rates for technicians trained on this equipment, and response travel costs for each year of the maintenance period. Submittals that do not identify all post contract maintenance costs will not be accepted. Rates and costs shall be valid for the period of five (5) years after expiration of the guaranty POST CONTRACT EXPANSIONS: A. The contractor shall have the ability to provide parts and labor to expand the system specified, if so requested, for a period of five (5) years from the date of acceptance. B. As part of the submittal, include a quotation for all parts and material, and all installation and test labor as needed to increase the number of intelligent or addressable devices by ten percent (10%). This quotation shall include intelligent smoke detectors, intelligent heat detectors, addressable manual stations, addressable monitor modules, and addressable control modules equal in number to one tenth of the number required to meet this specification (list actual quantity of each type). C. The quotation shall include installation, test labor, and labor to reprogram the system for this 10% expansion. If additional FACP hardware is required, include the material and labor necessary to install this hardware.5 D. Do not include cost of conduit or wire or the cost to install conduit or wire except for labor to make final connections at the FACP and at each intelligent addressable device. Do not include the cost of conventional peripherals or the cost of initiating devices or notification appliances connected to the addressable monitor/control modules. E. Submittals that do not include this estimate of post contract expansion cost will not be accepted APPLICABLE STANDARDS AND SPECIFICATIONS: The specifications and standards listed below form a part of this specification. The system shall fully comply with the latest issue of these standards, if applicable. A. National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) - USA: No. 13 Sprinkler Systems No. 70 National Electric Code (NEC) No. 72 National Fire Alarm Code No. 101 Life Safety Code B. The system and its components shall be Underwriters Laboratories, Inc. listed under the appropriate UL testing standard as listed herein for fire alarm applications and the installation shall be in compliance with the UL listing. C. Local and State Building Codes. D. All requirements of the Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) APPROVALS: A. The system shall have proper listing and/or approval from the following nationally recognized agencies: UL Underwriters Laboratories Inc ULC Underwriters Laboratories Canada FM Factory Mutual MEA Material Equipment Acceptance (NYC) CSFM California State Fire Marshal PART 2.0 PRODUCTS 2.1. EQUIPMENT AND MATERIAL, GENERAL: A. All equipment and components shall be new, and the manufacturer's current model. The materials, appliances, equipment and devices shall be tested and listed by a nationally recognized approvals agency for use as part of a fire protective signaling system, meeting the National Fire Alarm Code. B. All equipment and components shall be installed in strict compliance with manufacturers' recommendations. Consult the manufacturer's installation manuals for all wiring diagrams, schematics, physical equipment sizes, etc., before beginning system6 installation. C. All equipment shall be attached to walls and ceiling/floor assemblies and shall be held firmly in place (e.g., detectors shall not be supported solely by suspended ceilings). Fasteners and supports shall be adequate to support the required load CONDUIT AND WIRE: A. Conduit: 1. Conduit shall be in accordance with The National Electrical Code (NEC), local and state requirements. 2. Where required, all wiring shall be installed in conduit or raceway. Conduit fill shall not exceed 40 percent of interior cross sectional area where three or more cables are contained within a single conduit. 3. Cable must be separated from any open conductors of power, or Class 1 circuits, and shall not be placed in any conduit, junction box or raceway containing these conductors, per NEC Article With the exception of telephone connections, wiring for 24-volt DC control, alarm notification, emergency communication and similar power-limited auxiliary functions may be run in the same conduit as initiating and signaling line circuits. All circuits shall be provided with transient suppression devices and the system shall be designed to permit simultaneous operation of all circuits without interference or loss of signals. 5. Conduit shall not enter the fire alarm control panel, or any other remotely mounted control panel equipment or backboxes, except where conduit entry is specified by the FACP manufacturer. 6. Conduit shall be 3/4-inch (19.1 mm) minimum. B. Wire: 1. All fire alarm system wiring shall be new. 2. Wiring shall be in accordance with local, state and national codes (e.g., NEC Article 760) and as recommended by the manufacturer of the fire alarm system. Number and size of conductors shall be as recommended by the fire alarm system manufacturer, but not less than 18 AWG (1.02 mm) for Initiating Device Circuits or for Notification Appliance Circuits. 3. All wire and cable shall be listed and/or approved by a recognized testing agency for use with a protective signaling system. 4. Wire and cable not installed in conduit shall have a fire resistance rating suitable for the installation as indicated in NEC 760 (e.g., FPLR). 5. Wiring used for the multiplex communication circuit (SLC) shall be twisted and support a minimum wiring distance of 10,000 feet. The design of the system shall permit use of IDC and NAC wiring in the same conduit with the SLC communication circuit. Shielded wire shall not be required. 6. All field wiring shall be electrically supervised for open circuit and ground fault. 7. The fire alarm control panel shall be capable of T-tapping Class B (NFPA Style 4) Signaling Line Circuits (SLCs). Systems which do not allow or have restrictions in, for example, the amount of T-taps, length of T-taps etc., are not acceptable. C. Terminal Boxes, Junction Boxes and Cabinets:7 1. All boxes and cabinets shall be UL listed for their use and purpose. D. The fire alarm control panel shall be connected to a separate dedicated branch circuit, maximum 20 amperes. This circuit shall be labeled at the main power distribution panel as FIRE ALARM. Fire alarm control panel primary power wiring shall be 12 AWG. The control panel cabinet shall be grounded securely to either a cold water pipe or grounding rod. The control panel enclosure shall feature a quick removal chassis to facilitate rapid replacement of the FACP electronics. 1. The FACP shall be capable of coding Notification Appliance Circuits in March Time Code (120 PPM), Temporal (NFPA 72), and California Code. Main panel notification circuits (NACs 1 & 2) shall also automatically synchronize any of the following manufacturer's notification appliances connected to them: System Sensor, Wheelock, or Gentex with no need for additional synchronization modules MAIN FIRE ALARM CONTROL PANEL: A. The FACP shall be a NOTIFIER NFW-50 (FireWarden-50) and shall contain a microprocessor-based Central Processing Unit (CPU). The CPU shall communicate with and control the following types of equipment used to make up the system: intelligent addressable smoke and thermal (heat) detectors, addressable modules, printer, annunciators, Digital Dialer and Ethernet Communicators and other system controlled devices. Ethernet communications shall be via a NOTIFIER Model IPDACT. Central station supervisory equipment shall be a Teldat Corporation Visoralarm-Plus 2U listed to UL-864 standards. B. Operator Control 1. Acknowledge Switch: a. Activation of the control panel Acknowledge switch in response to new alarms and/or troubles shall silence the local panel piezo electric signal and change the alarm and trouble LEDs from flashing mode to steady-on mode. If multiple alarm or trouble conditions exist, depression of this switch shall advance the 80-character LCD display to the next alarm or trouble condition. b. Depression of the Acknowledge switch shall also silence all remote annunciator piezo sounders. 2. Alarm Silence Switch: a. Activation of the alarm silence switch shall cause all programmed alarm notification appliances and relays to return to the normal condition after an alarm condition. The selection of notification circuits and relays that are silenceable by this switch shall be fully field programmable within the confines of all applicable standards. The FACP software shall include silence inhibit and auto-silence timers. 3. Alarm Activate (Drill) Switch: The Alarm Activate switch shall activate all notification appliance circuits. The drill8 function shall latch until the panel is silenced or reset. 4. System Reset Switch: Activation of the System Reset switch shall cause all electronically-latched initiating devices, appliances or software zones, as well as all associated output devices and circuits, to return to their normal condition. 5. Lamp Test: The Lamp Test switch shall activate all system LEDs and light each segment of the liquid crystal display. C. System Capacity and General Operation 1. The control panel shall provide, or be capable of, expansion to 50 intelligent/addressable devices. 2. The control panel shall include two Form-C programmable relays which can be used for Alarm, Supervisory, and a fixed Trouble relay rated at a minimum of VDC and VAC. It shall also include two programmable Notification Appliance Circuits (NACs) capable of being wired as Class B (NFPA Style Y) or Class A (NFPA Style Z). 3. The fire alarm control panel shall include an operator interface control and annunciation panel that shall include a backlit Liquid Crystal Display (LCD), individual color-coded system status LEDs, and an alphanumeric keypad for the field programming and control of the fire alarm system. 4. All programming or editing of the existing program in the system shall be achieved without special equipment and without interrupting the alarm monitoring functions of the fire alarm control panel. The system shall be fully programmable, configurable, and expandable in the field without the need for special tools, PROM programmers or PC based programmers. It shall not require replacement of memory ICs to facilitate programming changes. The control unit will support the ability to upgrade its operating program using FLASH memory technology. The unit shall provide the user with the ability to program from either the included keypad, a standard PS2-style PC keyboard or from a computer running upload/download software. 5. The system shall allow the programming of any input to activate any output or group of outputs. Systems which have limited programming (such as general alarm), have complicated programming (such as a diode matrix), or REQUIRE a laptop personal computer are not considered suitable substitutes. 6. The FACP shall provide the following features: a. Drift compensation to extend detector accuracy over life. Drift compensation shall also include a smoothing feature, allowing transient noise signals to be filtered out. b. Detector sensitivity test, meeting requirements of NFPA 72, Maintenance alert, with two levels (maintenance alert/maintenance urgent), to warn of excessive smoke detector dirt or dust accumulation. c. The ability to display or print system reports. d. Alarm Verification. e. Positive Alarm Sequence (PAS presignal), meeting NFPA 72 (2002 Edition)9 requirements. f. Rapid manual station reporting. g. Non-alarm points for general (non-fire) control. h. Periodic detector test, conducted automatically by the software. i. Walk test, with a check for two detectors set to same address. 7. The FACP shall be capable of coding Notification Appliance Circuits in March Time Code (120 PPM), Temporal (NFPA 72), and California Code. Main panel notification circuits (NACs 1 & 2) shall also automatically synchronize and be programmable for any of the following manufacturer's notification appliances connected to them: System Sensor, Wheelock or Gentex with no need for additional synchronization modules. D. Central Microprocessor 1. The microprocessor shall be a state-of-the-art, high speed, 16-bit RISC device and it shall communicate with, monitor and control all external interfaces. It shall include an EPROM for system program storage, non-volatile memory for building-specific program storage, and a "watch dog" timer circuit to detect and report microprocessor failure. 2. The microprocessor shall contain and execute all specific actions to be taken in the condition of an alarm. Control programming shall be held in non-volatile programmable memory, and shall not be lost even if system primary and secondary power failure occurs. 3. The microprocessor shall also provide a real-time clock for time annotation of system displays, printer, and history file. 4. A special program check function shall be provided to detect common operator errors. 5. An auto-programming capability (self-learn) shall be provided to quickly identify devices connected on the SLC and make the system operational. 6. For flexibility and to ensure program validity, an optional Windows(TM) based program utility shall be available. This program shall be used to off-line program the system with batch upload/download. This program shall also have a verification utility which scans the program files, identifying possible errors. It shall also have the ability to compare old program files to new ones, identifying differences in the two files to allow complete testing of any system operating changes. This shall be in incompliance with the NFPA 72 requirements for testing after system modification. E. Local Keyboard Interface 1. In addition to an integral keypad, the fire alarm control panel will accept a standard PS2-style keyboard for programming, testing, and control of the system. The keyboard will be able to execute the system functions ACKNOWLEDGE, SIGNALS SILENCED, DRILL and RESET. F. Display 1. The display shall provide all the controls and indicators used by the system operator and may also be used to program all system operational parameters. 2. The display shall include status information and custom alphanumeric labels for all10 intelligent detectors, addressable modules, internal panel circuits, and software zones. 3. The display shall contain an alphanumeric, text-type display and dedicated LEDs for the annunciation of AC POWER, FIRE ALARM, SUPERVISORY, TROUBLE, and ALARM SILENCED conditions. 4. The display keypad shall be part of the standard system and have the capability to command all system functions, entry of any alphabetic or numeric information, and field programming. Two different password levels shall be provided to prevent unauthorized system control or programming. 5. The display shall include the following operator control switches: ACKNOWLEDGE/STEP, ALARM SILENCE, DRILL (alarm activate), and SYSTEM RESET. G. Signaling Line Circuit (SLC) 1. The SLC interface shall provide power to and communicate with up to 50 devices of any type including: intelligent detectors (ionization, photoelectric, multi-sense or thermal), addressable pull stations, intelligent modules (monitor or control). Each SLC shall be capable of NFPA 72 Style 4, Style 6, or Style 7 (Class A or B) wiring. 2. The CPU shall receive information from all intelligent detectors to be processed to determine whether normal, alarm or trouble conditions exist for each detector. The software shall automatically compensate for the accumulation of dust in each detector up to allowable limits. The information shall also be used for automatic detector testing and for the determination of detector maintenance conditions. 3. The detector software shall meet NFPA 72 requirements and be certified by UL as a calibrated sensitivity test instrument. H. Serial Interfaces 1. The system shall provide a means of interfacing to UL Listed Electronic Data Processing (EDP) peripherals using the EIA-232 communications standard. 2. An annunciator RS-485 (ANN-Bus) bus shall be used to connect an UL-Listed 80-column printer anywhere within the 6,000 range of the serial bus connection. The printer shall communicate with the control panel using an RS-485 converter/interface complying with Electrical Industries Association standard EIA-232D. Power to the printer shall be Hz. The interface shall contain both a 9-pin serial and standard centronics parallel connector. Either shall be capable of connection to a serial or parallel printer. 3. The annunciator RS-485 (ANN-Bus) bus shall also provide connection to additional addressable modules supporting remote 80 character LCD text annunciators that mimic the standard panel display and controls. Said annunciators shall support remote acknowledge, silence, drill and reset functions and shall be enabled via a key switch. The bus shall also provide connection to addressable modules supporting up to 40 LEDs for use with a graphic annunciator. The bus shall also provide connection to programmable relay modules. The bus shall also provide connection to addressable LED annunciators. I. The control panel will have the capability of Reverse Polarity Transmission or connection to a Municipal Box for compliance with applicable NFPA standards.11 J. Digital Alarm Communicator Transmitter (DACT) and Internet Protocol Digital Alarm Communicator Transmitter (IPDACT). The DACT is an interface for communicating digital information between a fire alarm control panel and a UL-Listed central station. When the optional IPDACT Ethernet module is connected to the on board DACT, the system shall be capable of transmitting contact ID formatted alarms to a central station equipped with a compatible IP receiver via Ethernet over a private or public WAN/LAN, Intranet or Ethernet. 1. The IPDACT communicator shall be an integral module component of the fire alarm control panel enclosure. 2. The IPDACT communicator shall include connections to the alarm panel's phone outputs and shall convert the contact ID protocol in DTMF form into UDP Ethernet Packets. It shall include the ability for simultaneous reporting of panel events up to three different IP addresses. 3. The IPDACT communicator shall be completely field-programmable locally from a PC via a serial port or via Ethernet and Telnet. 4. The IPDACT communicator shall be capable of transmitting events in contact ID format. 5. Communication shall include vital system status such as: - Independent Zone (Alarm, trouble, non-alarm, supervisory) - Independent Addressable Device Status - AC (Mains) Power Loss - Low Battery and Earth Fault - System Off Normal - 12 and 24 Hour Test Signal - Abnormal Test Signal (per UL requirements) - EIA-485 Communications Failure - IP Line Failure 6. The IPDACT communicator shall support independent zone/point reporting via the Contact ID format. In this format, the IPDACT shall support the transmission of addressable points within the system. This format shall enable the central station to have exact details concerning the location of the fire for emergency response. The IPDACT communicator shall be capable of providing simulated phone lines to the FACP and panel communication over IP shall be transparent to the panel's normal operation over phone lines. 7. The IPDACT communicator shall utilize a supervisory heart beat signal of no less than once every 90 seconds insuring multiplexed level line supervision. Loss of Internet or Intranet connectivity shall be reported in no more than 200 seconds. Alarm events shall be transmitted to a central station in no less than 90 seconds from time of initiation to time of notification. 8. The supervising station shall consist of a Teldat Corporation Visoralarm-Plus 2U receiver. Said receiver shall contain a smart card for backup of all account data. Backup smart card shall initiate a new receiver with all account information in less than 60 seconds from power up. K. Enclosures: 1. The control panel shall be housed in a UL-listed cabinet suitable for surface or12 semi-flush mounting. The cabinet and front shall be corrosion protected and painted (red or black) via manufacturer's standard finish. 2. The back box and door shall be constructed of steel with provisions for electrical conduit connections into the sides and top. 3. The door shall provide a key lock and shall provide for the viewing of all indicators. 4. The cabinet shall accept a chassis containing the PCB and to assist in quick replacement of all the electronics including power supply shall require no more than two bolts to secure the panel to the enclosure back box. 5. The cabinet shall also support a mechanical secured optional dress panel limiting access to the internals of the panel. 6. One EIA-232 interface shall be used to connect an UL-Listed 80-column printer. The printer shall communicate with the control panel using an interface complying with Electrical Industries Association standard EIA-232D. Power to the printer shall be Hz. L. Voice Evacuation Control Panel 1. The FACP shall be a NOTIFIER NFV-25/50 (FireVoice 25/50) and shall contain a microprocessor-based Central Processing Unit (CPU). The CPU shall distribute and control emergency voice messages over the speaker circuits. 2. The system shall provide the capability to interface to distributed voice evacuation control panels from the same manufacturer. 3. Shall have as minimum requirements: a. Integral 25 Watt, 25 Vrms audio amplifier with optional converter for 70.7-volt systems. The system shall be capable of expansion to 50 watts total via the insertion of an additional 25-watt audio amplifier module into the same cabinet. b. Speaker circuit that can be wired both Class A or B. c. Integral Digital Message Generator with a memory capacity for up to 60 seconds of messaging. The Digital Message Generator shall be capable of producing five distinct messages (12 seconds each). These messages shall field programmable without the use of additional equipment. d. Built in alert tone generators with steady, slow whoop, high/low and chime tone field programmable. e. The Voice Control Panel will be capable of detecting and annunciating the following conditions: Loss of Power (AC and DC), System Trouble, Ground Fault, Alarm, Microphone Trouble, Message Generator Trouble, Tone Generator Trouble, and Amplifier Fault. f. The Voice Control Panel shall be fully supervised including microphone, amplifier output, message generator, speaker wiring, and tone generation. g. Speaker outputs shall be fully power-limited. h. Amplifiers will be supplied power independently to eliminate a short on one circuit from affecting other circuits. i. The Voice Control Panel will provide full supervision on both active (alarm or music) and standby conditions. j. An optional zone splitter version shall be available that permits splitting speaker circuits into 8 specific zones. k. An optional distributed amplifier unit shall be available that permits splitting13 4. Speakers: speaker circuits into up to a total of 24 zones when two distributed amplifiers are combined with the master unit. a. All speakers shall operate on 25 or 70 VRMS with field selectable output taps from 0.5 to 2.0 Watts. b. Speakers in corridors and public spaces shall produce a nominal sound output of 84 dba at 10 feet (3m). c. Frequency response shall be a minimum of 400 HZ to 4000 HZ. d. The back of each speaker shall be sealed to protect the speaker cone from damage and dust. M. Field Charging Power Supply: The FCPS-24S6/8 is a device designed for use as either a remote 24-volt power supply or as a booster for powering Notification Appliances. 1. The FCPS-24S8 shall offer up to 8.0 amps (6.0 amps continuous) of regulated 24-volt power. It shall include an integral charger designed to charge 18.0 amp hour batteries. The FCPS-24S6 shall offer up to 6.0 amps (4.0 amps continuous) of regulated 24-volt power. It shall include an integral charger designed to charge 18.0 amp hour batteries. 2. The Field Charging Power Supply shall have two input triggers. The input trigger shall be a Notification Appliance Circuit (from the fire alarm control panel) or a control relay. Four NAC outputs, wired NFPA Style Y or Z, shall be available for connection to the Notification devices. 3. The FCPS shall optionally provide synchronization of all connected strobes or horn strobe combinations when System Sensor, Wheelock, or Gentex devices are installed. 4. The FCPS shall function as a sync follower as well as a sync generator. 5. The FCPS shall include a surface mount backbox. 6. The Field Charging Power Supply shall include the ability to delay the reporting of an AC fail condition per NFPA requirements. 7. The FCPS shall provide 24 VDC regulated and power-limited circuitry per UL Ninth edition standards. N. Power Supply: 1. The main power supply for the fire alarm control panel shall provide 3.7 amps of available power for the control panel and peripheral devices. The main power supply power can be expanded to 6.7 amps with the addition of an expansion transformer. 2. Provisions will be made to allow the audio-visual power to be increased as required by adding modular expansion audio-visual power supplies. 3. Positive-Temperature-Coefficient (PTC) thermistors, circuit breakers, or other over-current protection shall be provided on all power outputs. The power supply shall provide an integral battery charger or may be used with an external battery and charger systems. Battery arrangement may be configured in the field. 4. The main power supply shall continuously monitor all field wires for earth ground conditions. 5. The main power supply shall operate on 120 VAC, 60 Hz, and shall provide all necessary power for the FACP.14 O. Speakers: 1. All speakers shall operate on 25 VRMS or with field selectable output taps from 0.5 to 2.0 Watts. 2. Speakers in corridors and public spaces shall produce a nominal sound output of 84 dba at 10 feet (3m). 3. Frequency response shall be a minimum of 400 HZ to 4000 HZ. 4. The back of each speaker shall be sealed to protect the speaker cone from damage and dust. P. Audible/Visual Combination Devices: 1. Shall meet the applicable requirements of Section A listed above for audibility. 2. Shall meet the requirements of Section B listed above for visibility. Q. Programmable Electronic Sounders: 1. Electronic sounders shall operate on 24 VDC nominal. 2. Electronic sounders shall be field programmable without the use of special tools, at a sound level of at least 90 dba measured at 10 feet from the device. 3. Shall be flush or surface mounted as shown on plans. R. Strobe lights shall meet the requirements of the ADA, UL Standard 1971, be fully synchronized, and shall meet the following criteria: 1. The maximum pulse duration shall be 2/10 of one second 2. Strobe intensity shall meet the requirements of UL The flash rate shall meet the requirements of UL S. Horn/Strobes: 1. Operate on 24 VDC 2. Have two selectable tone options of temporal 3 and non-temporal continuous pattern. 3. Have at least 2 audibility options 4. Maximum Pulse Duration: 0.2 second. 5. Strobe Intensity: UL Flash Rate: UL Strobe Candela Rating: Determine by positioning selector switch on back of device. T. Manual Fire Alarm Stations 1. Manual fire alarm stations shall be non-code, non-breakglass type, equipped with key lock so that they may be tested without operating the handle. 2. Stations must be designed such that after an actual activation, they cannot be restored to normal except by key reset. 3. An operated station shall automatically condition itself so as to be visually detected, as operated, at a minimum distance of 100 feet (30.5 m) front or side. 4. Manual stations shall be constructed of high impact Lexan, with operating instructions provided on the cover. The word FIRE shall appear on the manual15 station in letters one half inch (12.7 mm) in size or larger. U. Conventional Photoelectric Area Smoke Detectors 1. Photoelectric smoke detectors shall be a 24 VDC, two wire, ceiling-mounted, light scattering type using an LED light source. 2. Each detector shall contain a remote LED output and a built-in test switch. 3. Detector shall be provided on a twist-lock base. 4. It shall be possible to perform a calibrated sensitivity and performance test on the detector without the need for the generation of smoke. The test method shall test all detector circuits. 5. A visual indication of an alarm shall be provided by dual latching Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs), on the detector, which may be seen from ground level over 360 degrees. These LEDs shall flash at least every 10 seconds, indicating that power is applied to the detector. 6. The detector shall not go into alarm when exposed to air velocities of up to 3000 feet (914.4 m) per minute. 7. The detector screen and cover assembly shall be easily removable for field cleaning of the detector chamber. 8. All field wire connections shall be made to the base through the use of a clamping plate and screw. V. Conventional Ionization Type Area Smoke Detectors 1. Ionization type smoke detectors shall be a two wire, 24 VDC type using a dual unipolar chamber. 2. Each detector shall contain a remote LED output and a built-in test switch. 3. Detector shall be provided on a twist-lock base. 4. It shall be possible to perform a calibration sensitivity and performance test on the detector without the need for the generation of smoke. 5. A visual indication of an alarm shall be provided by dual latching Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs) over 360 degrees, on the detector, which may be seen from ground level. This LED shall flash every 10 seconds, indicating that power is applied to the detector. 6. The detector shall not alarm when exposed to air velocities of up to 1,200 feet ( m) per minute. The detector screen and cover assembly shall be easily removable for field cleaning of the detector chamber. 7. All field wire connections shall be made to the base through the use of a clamping plate and screw. W. Duct Smoke Detectors Duct smoke detectors shall be a 24 VDC type with visual alarm and power indicators, and a reset switch. Each detector shall be installed upon the composite supply/return air ducts(s), with properly sized air sampling tubes. X. Projected Beam Detectors 1. The projected beam type shall be a 4-wire 24 VDC device. 2. The detector shall be listed to UL 268 and shall consist of a separate transmitter and receiver capable of being powered separately or together.16 3. The detector shall operate in either a short range (30' - 100') or long range (100' - 330') mode. 4. The temperature range of the device shall be -22 degrees F to 131 degrees F. 5. The detector shall feature a bank of four alignment LEDs on both the receiver and the transmitter that are used to ensure proper alignment of unit without special tools. 6. Beam detectors shall feature automatic gain control which will compensate for gradual signal deterioration from dirt accumulation on lenses. 7. The unit shall be both ceiling and wall mountable. 8. The detector shall have the ability to be tested using calibrated test filters or magnet activated remote test station. Y. Automatic Conventional Heat Detectors 1. Automatic heat detectors shall have a combination rate of rise and fixed temperature rated at 135 degrees Fahrenheit (57.2 Celsius) for areas where ambient temperatures do not exceed 100 degrees (37.7 Celsius), and 200 degrees (93.33 Celsius) for areas where the temperature does not exceed 150 degrees (65.5 Celsius). 2. Automatic heat detectors shall be a low profile, ceiling mount type with positive indication of activation. 3. The rate of rise element shall consist of an air chamber, a flexible metal diaphragm, and a factory calibrated, moisture-proof, trouble free vent, and shall operate when the rate of temperature rise exceeds 15 degrees F (9.4 degrees C) per minute. 4. The fixed temperature element shall consist of a fusible alloy retainer and actuator shaft. 5. Automatic heat detectors shall have a smooth ceiling rating of 2500 square feet (762 square meters). Z. Waterflow Indicator: 1. Waterflow Switches shall be an integral, mechanical, non-coded, non-accumulative retard type. 2. Waterflow Switches shall have an alarm transmission delay time which is conveniently adjustable from 0 to 60 seconds. Initial settings shall be seconds. 3. All waterflow switches shall come from a single manufacturer and series. 4. Waterflow switches shall be provided and connected under this section but installed by the mechanical contractor. 5. Where possible, locate waterflow switches a minimum of one (1) foot from a fitting which changes the direction of the flow and a minimum of three (3) feet from a valve. AA. Sprinkler and Standpipe Valve Supervisory Switches: 1. Each sprinkler system water supply control valve riser, zone control valve, and standpipe system riser control valve shall be equipped with a supervisory switch. Standpipe hose valves, and test and drain valves shall not be equipped with supervisory switches. 2. PIV (post indicator valve) or main gate valves shall be equipped with a supervisory17 switch. 3. The switch shall be mounted so as not to interfere with the normal operation of the valve and adjusted to operate within two revolutions toward the closed position of the valve control, or when the stem has moved no more than one-fifth of the distance from its normal position. 4. The supervisory switch shall be contained in a weatherproof aluminum housing, which shall provide a 3/4 inch (19 mm) conduit entrance and incorporate the necessary facilities for attachment to the valves. 5. The switch housing shall be finished in red baked enamel. 6. The entire installed assembly shall be tamper proof and arranged to cause a switch operation if the housing cover is removed, or if the unit is removed from its mounting. 7. Valve supervisory switches shall be provided and connected under this section and installed by mechanical contractor. a. This unit shall provide for each zone: alarm indications, using a red alarm and yellow trouble long-life LEDs and control switches for the control of fire alarm control panel functions. The annunciator will also have an ON-LINE LED, local piezo electric signal, local acknowledge/lamp test switch, and custom slide-in zone/function identification labels. b. Switches shall be available for remote annunciation and control of output points in the system, system acknowledge, telephone zone select, speaker select, global signal silence, and global system reset within the confines of all applicable standards. BB. Specific System Operations 1. Alarm Verification: Each of the intelligent addressable smoke detectors in the system may be independently programmed for verification of alarm signals. The alarm verification time period shall not exceed 2 minutes. 2. Point Disable: Any addressable device or conventional circuit in the system may be enabled or disabled through the system keypad. 3. Point Read: The system shall be able to display the following point status diagnostic functions: a. Device status b. Device type c. Custom device label d. Device zone assignments 4. System Status Reports: Upon command from an operator of the system, a status report will be generated and printed, listing all system status. 5. System History Recording and Reporting: The fire alarm control panel shall contain a history buffer that will be capable of storing up to 500 events. Each of these activations will be stored and time and date stamped with the actual time of the activation. The contents of the history buffer may be manually reviewed, one event at a time, or printed in its entirety. a. The history buffer shall use non-volatile memory. Systems that use volatile memory for history storage are not acceptable substitutes.18 6. Automatic Detector Maintenance Alert: The fire alarm control panel shall automatically interrogate each intelligent detector and shall analyze the detector responses over a period of time. If any intelligent detector in the system responds with a reading that is above or below normal limits, then the system will enter the trouble mode, and the particular detector will be annunciated on the system display. This feature shall in no way inhibit the receipt of alarm conditions in the system, nor shall it require any special hardware, special tools or computer expertise to perform. 7. The fire alarm control panel shall include Silent and Audible Walk Test functions - Silent and Audible. It shall include the ability to test initiating device circuits and Notification Appliance Circuits from the field without returning to the panel to reset the system. The operation shall be as follows: a. The Silent Walk Test will not sound NACs but will store the Walk Test information in History for later viewing. b. Alarming an initiating device shall activate programmed outputs, which are selected to participate in Walk Test. c. Introducing a trouble into the initiating device shall activate the programmed outputs. d. Walk Test shall be selectable on a per device/circuit basis. All devices and circuits which are not selected for Walk Test shall continue to provide fire protection and if an alarm is detected, will exit Walk Test and activate all programmed alarm functions. e. All devices tested in walk test shall be recorded in the history buffer. 8. Waterflow Operation a. An alarm from a waterflow detection device shall activate the appropriate alarm message on the control panel display; turn on all programmed Notification Appliance Circuits and shall not be affected by the Signal Silence switch. 9. Supervisory Operation a. An alarm from a supervisory device shall cause the appropriate indication on the control panel display, light a common supervisory LED, but will not cause the system to enter the trouble mode. 10. Signal Silence Operation a. The FACP shall have the ability to program each output circuit (notification circuit or relay) to deactivate upon depression of the Signal Silence switch. 11. Non-Alarm Input Operation a. Any addressable initiating device in the system may be used as a non-alarm input to monitor normally open contact type devices. Non-alarm functions are a lower priority than fire alarm initiating devices SYSTEM COMPONENTS:19 A. Addressable Manual Fire Alarm Box (manual station) 1. Addressable manual fire alarm boxes shall, on command from the control panel, send data to the panel representing the state of the manual switch and the addressable communication module status. They shall use a key operated test-reset lock, and shall be designed so that after actual emergency operation, they cannot be restored to normal use except by the use of a key. 2. All operated stations shall have a positive, visual indication of operation and utilize a key type reset. 3. Manual fire alarm boxes shall be constructed of Lexan with clearly visible operating instructions provided on the cover. The word FIRE shall appear on the front of the stations in raised letters, 1.75 inches (44 mm) or larger. B. Advanced Multi-Criteria Intelligent Detector 1. The intelligent multi criteria IntelliQuad detector shall be an addressable device combining four sensing elements in a single sensing device providing the ability to detect all four major elements of a fire. The detector design shall allow sensitivity setting between 1% to 4% per foot obscuration. 2. The detector shall include a photoelectric sensing element, thermal sensing element, IR (Infrared) sensing element and CO (carbon monoxide) sensor. C. Intelligent Photoelectric Smoke Detector 1. The detectors shall use the photoelectric (light-scattering) principal to measure smoke density and shall, on command from the control panel, send data to the panel representing the analog level of smoke density. D. Intelligent Ionization Smoke Detector 1. The detectors shall use the dual-chamber ionization principal to measure products of combustion and shall, on command from the control panel, send data to the panel representing the analog level of products of combustion. E. Intelligent Thermal Detectors 1. Thermal detectors shall be intelligent addressable devices. Thermal detectors shall be available with a rating of 135 degrees Fahrenheit (58 degrees Celsius) fixed, fixed 135 degree F with a rate of rise feature at 15 degrees F (9.4 degrees C) per minute, and a high temperature thermal rated at 190 degrees F (88 degrees C). It shall connect via two wires to the fire alarm control panel signaling line circuit. F. Intelligent Duct Smoke Detector 1. The smoke detector housing shall accommodate either an intelligent ionization detector or an intelligent photoelectric detector, of that provides continuous analog monitoring and alarm verification from the panel. 2. When sufficient smoke is sensed, an alarm signal is initiated at the FACP, and appropriate action taken to change over air handling systems to help prevent the rapid distribution of toxic smoke and fire gases throughout the areas served by the duct system.20 G. Addressable Dry Contact Monitor Module 1. Addressable monitor modules shall be provided to connect one supervised IDC zone of conventional alarm initiating devices (any N.O. dry contact device) to one of the fire alarm control panel SLCs. 2. The IDC zone shall be suitable for Style D or Style B operation. An LED shall be provided that shall flash under normal conditions, indicating that the monitor module is operational and in regular communication with the control panel. 3. For difficult to reach areas, the monitor module shall be available in a miniature package and shall be no larger than 2-3/4 inch (70 mm) x 1-1/4 inch (31.7 mm) x 1/2 inch (12.7 mm). This version need not include Style D or an LED. 4. For multiple dry contact monitoring a module shall be available that provides 10 Style B or 5 Style D input circuits. H. Two Wire Detector Monitoring 1. Means shall be provided for the monitoring of conventional Initiating Device Circuits populated with 2-wire smoke detectors as well as normally open contact alarm initiating devices (pull stations, heat detectors, etc). 2. Each IDC of conventional devices will be monitored as a distinct address on the polling circuit by an addressable module. The module will supervise the IDC for alarms and circuit integrity (opens). 3. The monitoring module will be compatible, and listed as such, with all 2-wire smoke detectors on the supervised circuit. 4. The IDC zone may be wired for Class A or B (Style D or Style B) operation. An LED shall be provided that shall flash under normal conditions, indicating that the monitor module is operational and in regular communication with the control panel. 5. The monitoring module shall be capable of mounting in a 4-inch square (101.6 mm square), 2-1/8 inch (54 mm) deep electrical box or in a surface mount backbox. 6. For multiple 2-wire smoke detector circuit monitoring a module shall be available that provides 6 Style B or 3 Style D input circuits. I. Addressable Control Relay Module 1. Addressable control relay modules shall be provided to control the operation of fan shutdown and other auxiliary control functions. 2. The control module shall mount in a standard 4-inch square, 2-1/8 inch deep electrical box, or to a surface mounted backbox. 3. The control relay module will provide a dry contact, Form-C relay. The relay coil shall be magnetically latched to reduce wiring connection requirements, and to insure that 100% of all auxiliary relays may be energized at the same time on the same pair of wires. 4. The control relay module shall be suitable for pilot duty applications and rated for a minimum of 0.6 amps at 30 VDC. J. Addressable Control Module 1. Addressable control modules shall be provided to supervise and control the operation of one conventional NACs of compatible, 24 VDC powered, polarized audio/visual notification appliances. View more
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City of Bettendorf Fire Alarm System Requirements Section 907 of the 2009 Edition of the International Fire Code (IFC) and Section 10-7-3 of the Municipal Code provide fire alarm requirements. IFC Section More information Design and Construction Standards SECTION 16720 FIRE ALARM AND SMOKE DETECTION SYSTEMS
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FIRE DETECTION, ALARM AND MASS NOTIFICATION SYSTEMS Inspection, testing, and maintenance of fire detection, alarm and Mass Notification systems shall be performed in accordance with the manufacturer's More information 1.0 General. Inspection, Testing, and Maintenance 1 of 8
1.0 General 1.1 Scope This specifications covers the minimum requirements for the inspection, testing, and maintenance of the existing Notifier fire alarm systems at Bergen Community College (BCC) campus More information Module 5. Fire and Emergency Alarm System Part I- Basics
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Design Standards Fire Alarm Systems Division 13860 (1995 CMS); 283100 (2004 CMS) Amended Feb 2015 13860 (283100) FIRE ALARM SYSTEM The following standard shall be followed for the design of University More information 16720S01 - FIRE ALARM SYSTEM (HARDWIRED), MANUAL AND AUTOMATIC
1. GENERAL 1. Fire alarm system shall be manufactured by Simplex, Autocall or Edwards. Simplex part numbers are provided in this spec for clarification only and do not exclude equivalent part numbers of More information University of Houston Master Construction Specifications Insert Project Name
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TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS Page 1 of 19 FIRE DETECTION AND ALARM SYSTEM Scope Furnish a complete 24V DC analogue addressable, electrically supervised, zone annunciated, fire detection and alarm system as More information Invitation to Bid FIRE ALARM & DETECTION SYSTEM
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SYSTEM ABORT PUSH AND HOLD COIL SUPERVISION MODULE (2 AMP) 2081-9046 RED INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS 574-437 REV YEL NAC+ MAINTAIN 1/4" SEPARATION BETWEEN POW ER LIMITED (RED/) AND NONPOWER S LIMITED (YEL/) More information Telluride Fire Protection District Fire Alarm Systems Policy Version 03/2007
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SECTION 13850 - FIRE DETECTION AND ALARM 1.1 APPLICABLE STANDARDS A. Fire detection and alarm systems shall be designed and installed in accordance with the following standards, including appendices (current More information JULY 2013 UCB STANDARDS 16720-1
SECTION 16720 FIRE ALARM AND DETECTION SYSTEMS PART 1 GENERAL 1.01 Reference A. Related Sections 1. Section 15300 Fire Protection 2. Section 15950 Controls 3. Division 16 Electrical 4. Division 14 - Conveying More information FIRE DETECTION AND ALARM
Scope Provide a fire alarm system, or expand the existing system, as required by Code, the requirements in the Special Instructions to Designers (SID) of the Design Guidelines, and/or as noted in the Program More information EDWARDS SIGNAL SOLUTIONS www.edwards-signals.com DISTRIBUTED BY: Lee Dan Communications, Inc. www.leedan.com info@leedan.com Toll-Free: 800-231-1414
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ORANGE COUNTY FIRE AUTHORITY Planning & Development Services Section 1 Fire Authority Road, Building A, Irvine, CA 92602 714-573-6100 www.ocfa.org New and Existing Fire Alarm & Signaling Systems Guideline More information FIRE ALARM SYSTEM SUBMITTAL CHECKLIST AND APPLICATION
PERMITS AND INSPECTIONS FIRE ALARM SYSTEM SUBMITTAL CHECKLIST AND APPLICATION 911 Assigned PROJECT LOCATION Subdivision: Lot: Blk: Sec: PROJECT New Construction Addition/Remodel Demolition Other: Number More information Original Document 10/16/07 Revised 01/30/09 2 nd Revision 01-23-12 3 rd Revision- 12/18/14
North Collier Fire Control & Rescue District Greater Naples Fire Rescue District Immokalee Fire Control & Rescue District 2800 North Horseshoe Drive Naples, Florida 34104 SYSTEM REHABILITATION PLAN CHECKLIST More information MA ANALOG FIRE ALARM SYSTEM
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PART 1. GENERAL 1.1 RELATED DOCUMENTS: A. Drawings and general provisions of the Contract, including General and Supplementary Conditions and Divisions 1 Specification Sections, apply to this Section. More information FIRE ALARM AND EMERGENCY COMMUNICATION SYSTEM RECORD OF COMPLETION
FIRE ALARM AND EMERGENCY COMMUNICATION SYSTEM RECORD OF COMPLETION To be completed by the system installation contractor at the time of system acceptance and approval. It shall be permitted to modify this More information Agenda. Agenda (continued) Fundamentals of Fire Alarm Systems
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FIRE ALARM APPLICATION ENUMCLAW FIRE DEPARTMENT 1330 Wells St, Enumclaw, WA 98022 Phone: 360-825-5544 Fax: 360-825-9442 COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT, BUILDING DEPARTMENT 1309 Myrtle Ave Enumclaw WA 98022 Phone: More information TrueAlarm Fire Alarm Systems
TrueAlarm Systems UL, ULC, CSFM Listed; FM Approved* Network Annunciators; es Features Provides a dedicated local area network (LAN) for connection of a TrueSite workstation server to remote clients: es More information Product Guide Specification
Gamewell-FCI May 2013 Honeywell Fire Systems 12 Clintonville Road Northford, Connecticut 06472-1653 Phone (203) 484-7161 Fax (203) 484-7118 Website www.gamewell-fci.com Product Guide Specification Specifier More information 2016 © DocPlayer.net Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Feedback