MrHappy Posted April 28, 2016 Posted April 28, 2016 IIRC the fire at Clandon was discovered by staff investigating why the socket they where using for their computer had switched off ? Opened cupboard door to check consumer unit to find a cupboard full of flames ? Quote Mr Veritas God
MrHappy Posted April 28, 2016 Posted April 28, 2016 ******** you've got me reading this again... INCIDENT NARRATIVE 1 Action Before Arrival of the Fire and Rescue Service 1.1 Prior to the time of call to the fire service, a member of the Surrey Infantry Museum staff was working in the museum basement office when his computer lost power. He went to the fuse board to investigate the loss of power and on opening the cupboard discovered that there is a fire inside. 1.2 He has contacted National Trust Staff, who responded to the basement area, isolated the power at the main electrical intake in the plant room and then at 16:08 hours dialled 999 on her mobile phone and requested the fire service. 1.3 The house is open to the public and the National Trust staff and volunteers then evacuated the building. the report only mentions "alarm" twice- As part of the investigation the building’s fire alarm panel information was accessed and the timing and location of activated smoke detectors show that prior to the arrival of the fire service smoke had travelled to the roof space. Rapid Fire Spread It is believed that the rapid fire spread observed at this incident occurred when the fire quickly reached the lift shaft allowing the smoke and fire to rapidly spread to each floor of the building and into the roof space. It is believed the fire was able to spread in to the room above the distribution board cupboard due to a lack of fire compartmentation above the board. An electrical contractor's report in 2010 noted a lack of fire stop/barrier to the ceiling recesses of the distribution board cupboard. This report did not recommend any remedial work regarding this issue Additional evidence of this comes from the fire alarm panel information. In addition to the lift shaft this building had horizontal ceiling voids in between each floor and many other hidden voids that accommodated unseen, rapid fire spread Quote Mr Veritas God
WDT Posted April 28, 2016 Author Posted April 28, 2016 2 minutes ago, MrHappy said: IIRC the fire at Clandon was discovered by staff investigating why the socket they where using for their computer had switched off ? Opened cupboard door to check consumer unit to find a cupboard full of flames ? As part of the investigation the building’s fire alarm panel information was accessed and the timing and location of activated smoke detectors show that prior to the arrival of the fire service smoke had travelled to the roof space. Ok good point it does not say the first activated Quote
WDT Posted April 28, 2016 Author Posted April 28, 2016 3 minutes ago, MrHappy said: ******** you've got me reading this again... Ha ha I am only sent here to test every staff dialed fire service, funny it don't say they activated it. Quote
MrHappy Posted April 28, 2016 Posted April 28, 2016 I think it's been discussed elsewhere in more detail, however you'd expect more mention of "alarm" in major fire ? Quote Mr Veritas God
WDT Posted April 28, 2016 Author Posted April 28, 2016 2 hours ago, MrHappy said: I think it's been discussed elsewhere in more detail, I am missing out. Quote
oldmodern Posted October 10, 2016 Posted October 10, 2016 Joined this party a little late. Am not an electrician but surprised the accident was blamed on a connection that was too tight! (page 7, 6.4) Thought F/tight was an electrical requirement! Quote
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