2012 43 Summer Wiring Matters Lifts For Firefighters
2012 43 Summer Wiring Matters Lifts For Firefighters
2012 43 Summer Wiring Matters Lifts For Firefighters
There appears to be a common area of misunderstanding leading to incorrectly designed supplies which result in reghting lift installations not being fully compliant with BS 7671, in particular, Chapter 56 and the requirements for reghters lifts contained in BS EN 81-72: Lifts for Fireghters. When carrying out an electrical design and/or installation, it will at some point be necessary to certify compliance with BS7671 for the entire electrical installation. This will include the certication of the safety services and, in particular, the reghting lift supply.
Failure to design or install the supplies correctly will not only jeopardise the integrity of the Electrical Installation Certicate, it may have an effect on the persons using the reghting lift in onerous conditions.
communication systems
Essential medical systems Industrial safety systems.
The subject areas addressed in the scope of Chapter 56 have many Codes of Practices and their own supporting British Standards.
The design of new buildings requires compliance with Building Regulations for England and Wales, which includes Approved Document B (Fire Safety). To meet the requirements of Building Regulations, Approved Document B (AD B), BS 9999 Code of Practice for Fire Safety in the design, management and use of buildings provide an abundance of best practice information for building designers and managers to use to discharge their responsibilities under the Building Act. (Building Regulations vary throughout the UK, this article focuses on England and Wales. However, in Scotland E
Fireghting lobby
Transformer room
Fire-resistant cable Side boundry Non-re-resistant cable Fire-resistant power failure signal cable Denotes 2 hour re rated enclosure
Fig 3 Extract from BS 8519, Example of dual supply, mains with standby LV generation
Life safety plant
Distribution
Primary main electrical distribution board Secondary main electrical distribution board
Transformer room
Transformer room
Fireghter lifts
HV switchroom
HV switchroom
are supported by Technical handbooks, www.scotland. gov.uk/Built-Environment/ Building/Building-standards/ and for Northern Ireland DFP Booklet E 2005 www.dfpni. gov.uk) Table 19 of BS 9999 sets out the provision of reghting shafts, and details additional mitigating measures to use as the level of difculty to access the re increases. The requirement for the reghting lift(s) is set out by the Building Control Ofcer, Approved inspector or the Project Fire Engineer as part of method of satisfying the requirements of Approved Document B and BS 9999. Fireghting lifts are
usuallyrequired in any building or part of a building where the upper most storey isgreater than 18m above oorlevel or where the depth of the surface of the oor of the lower most storey exceeds10m. Additional reghting lifts are required where the oor area exceeds 900m2 or the requirements for the development determine the number of lifts for reghting purposes. Lifts for reghting purposes are provided to assist reghters arriving with equipment and additional personnel to ght the re in as short a time as possible and those lifts should not be confused with evacuation lifts.
Fireghting lifts may contain many of the same features as an evacuation lift, although it may not preclude the re and rescue service evacuating disabled or impaired persons if necessary; Fig.1 indicates a typical reghting shaft arrangement.
types of ooring and accessibility to the re. However, these are usually dealt with as part of the construction/structural designof the building with input from the lift manufacturer. This does not negate the electrical designers need to understand the general requirements which are set out in the aforementioned standards. There are a number of principal requirements that are in the direct control of the electrical designer. These are:
the equipment in machinery
spaces are protected from water; the secondary power supply is located in a re E
35%
protected area;
the primary and secondary
power supplies are separated from each other and other power supplies; the primary and secondary power supplies are re protected to the same level as the lift well equipment. Specic risks and hazards will be particular to each individual project. In addressing these, a number of other considerations need to be made and the following questions answered:
What type of secondary
or switchgear position, consideration should be given to how the incoming section of the electrical supply will be affected if the building is on re. Where required, re segregation will be needed by either enclosing in re-resistant materials or by routing the cable through a re resistant duct or riser. The performance criteria for various types of re resistant enclosures is given in BS EN 1366, which for reghting lift supplies, requires a 120-minute re-protection period and an additional requirement to withstand the effects of water jets at the conclusion of the period. If the cable belongs to a utility company, re protection or re-routing may not be possible without a specic agreement. Regardless of ownership, the size of a cable may need to be increased due to the effects of enclosing the cable in a duct or similar. A fundamental principal of safety services, in particular reghting lifts, is that any distribution or nal circuit supplying the reghting lift(s) shall be exclusive to the lift(s) and independent of any other main or distribution circuit feeding other circuits. BS 7671 considers a safety source to be additional to the normal source, which is generally the public supply network. This approach differs to safety services contained in BS EN 81-72 and BS 8519 as they consider the primary supply to be of equal importance to the secondary supply.
provision of a separate supply from an independent substation, remote from the primary supply; as indicated in Fig. 2. Where such a supply is provided it is normally at high voltage (HV). BS 9999 recognises this arrangement is usually quite difcult to obtain unless strict measures are in place to prevent the supply network becoming inappropriately interconnected through the customers installation. The more usual approach of providing a secondary supply is to use a generator. This is a reliable method as it does not rely on special approvals from the electricity supply company. There is a break in supply with this system, which is due to the machine sensing loss of supply, starting the engine and then running the alternator up to synchronous speed to changeover. This type of break is classied by BS 7671 as a medium break in Regulation 560.4.1. Care needs to be taken when selecting a generator for secondary supplies as the initial load acceptance on change-over (rst step) is in the region of 60per cent of the full-load rating. Regulation 560.6.1 allows other sources of power, such as storage cells and primary cells, to be used as safety supplies. Due to the nature and magnitude of the reghting lift load, these sources are not usually considered. Fig. 3, which is an extract from BS 8519 indicates a life safety arrangement utilising a generator. Whichever solution is chosen, it is important to ensure that the primary and secondary
supplies are not co-located and they are not dependent upon each other in accordance with Regulation 560.7.1, i.e. they do not share distribution circuits, protective devices or other electrical equipment. As with the primary supply, a re-protected enclosure is required to protect the alternative supply from the effects of re and water jets. With a generator solution additional measures with respect to air intake and exhaust discharges have to be considered in line with Regulation 560.6.4 of BS7671.
supply is appropriate for this building? What routes are re protected and which are likely to give suitable segregation from each other? Where can the lift supply changeover equipment be installed? What re survival time can be used to ensure compliance? How does BS 8519 impact the sizing of the reghting lift cables and overall system?
At this point any potential proposals should be checked with the requirements of BS9999 and BS 7671 to ensure compatibility.
Secondary supply
The secondary supply to the reghting lift may be by the
(i) An electrical safety source for safety supply shall be so selected as to maintain a supply of adequate duration, and (ii) all equipment of safety services shall be so provided, either by construction or by erection, with protection ensuring re resistance of adequate duration The re survival time of a system is set out in BS 8519 as 60 minutes for large or complex buildings and 30 minutes for other buildings. Fireghting systems have additional requirements placed on them, with the systems installed being capable of assisting re ghters for 60minutes or 120 minutes depending on their role. Table 1 of BS 8519 identies that reghting lift supplies and their communications cabling shall have a minimum of Category 3 re resistance. This is in line with the requirements
of Regulation 560.8.2 which requires cables that control safety services are to have the same level of re protection as the supply it is controlling. Category 3 cables over 20 mm overall diameter meet the 120 minute survival time when tested in accordance with BS 8491, or control cables meeting ph120 classication when tested in accordance with BS EN 5020.
requirements of BS 8519
and the functionality called for in Regulation 560.5.2, information within informative Annexes C and D of BS 8519 needs to be considered to ensure that equipment is ableto function under the onerous conditions experienced in a re. In selecting a cable to supply the reghting lift supplies, it is essential to note the requirement for a 120 minute re rated cable. This requirement of 120 minutes restricts the numberof products currently available on the market. However, it is not just a case of selecting a re resistant cable, choices of route and which other services are to run with the reghting lift supplies are crucial. In addition to the usual assessment of full load operating current of the reghting lift it is important to look at the potential exposure of the cable to re. In taking into account any increase in
impedance and, hence, volt drop, it is ideal to protect cables from the effect of heat from the re. Where it is not practical or possible, the nextapproach should be to limit the length of run in any one re compartment. Information and examples in informative Annexe C of BS 8519 allow the designer to determine the approximate level of volt drop under re conditions. Once this value has been determined it should then discussed with the equipment manufacturer to ensure that the requirements of Section 525 of BS 7671 are met. Where necessary, cable sizes should be increased to ensure function of equipment throughout the re condition as required meeting the requirements of BS 8519 and required by Regulation 560.5.2. In order to ensure that the requirements for reghting lifts are met, the principal requirements have been
solutions contained in BS EN 81-72 and BS 8519. These specic details allow regulatory compliance with BS 7671 to be achieved. This allows the designer, constructor and inspector to conrm compliance with BS 7671 on the main Electrical Installation Certicate, meeting the express and implied requirements contained within BS 7671. This article is not aimed to be a complete and comprehensive selection guide for the installation of reghting lift design, it is provided to create awareness of different standards and guide designers and installers towards the correct information sources. It is the responsibility of the designer to ensure they have adequately assessed all relevant risks using reasonable skill and care.
Eur Ing Paul Harris CEng FIHEEMMIEE MCIBSE is an independent consultant for Harris Associates Ltd.