Title: Augmenting Fire Standpipe Systems
1Augmenting Fire Standpipe Systems
2Importance of
- To provide independent and redundant primary or
secondary water supply. - Floor outlets eliminate the need to stretch hose
lines from the pumper to the upper floors or deep
inside a larger area building.
3Principles
- To properly supply a standpipe system, the
following principles are involved - Nozzle pressure and friction loss in the attack
line, - Head pressure due to elevation,
- Friction loss in the system,
- Friction loss in the supply line from the pumper
to the FDC.
4FD Operational Variations
5- Fire Department Variations
- Attack and Supply lines
- Some FDs use a smooth bore or a combination
(fog straight stream) nozzle with 1 ½, 1 ¾,
or 2 hose with lengths up to 150, - Some FDs use 150-200 of 2 ½ hose with a
smooth bore or a combination nozzle, - Some FDs use a short length of 3 hose off the
outlet, then connect a gated wye,
6Different strokes for different folks
- Some FDs use 50 of 2 ½ hose to a gated wye,
supplying two 100 lengths of 1 ½ 2 hose with
combination nozzles, - One large metropolitan FD use 3 ½ hose with 3
couplings to supply the FDC, - Some FDs use LDH with Storz couplings to supply
the FDC or as a temporary backup for the system,
7Storz Connections
8LDH used as replacement to system
Reasons for use 1.Damaged, inoperable or
defective standpipe system. 2. Pressure
Restricting Valves or Pressure Reducing Valves
(PRVs) that cannot be overridden. 3. Heavy
volume of fire requiring greater fire flow.
9Hypothetical Situation
10Scenario
- Fire is on the eighth floor of a high rise.
- For the purpose of this presentation, we will
assume the use of 200 of 2 ½ hose for the
attack line, with a 1 1/8 smooth bore nozzle. - Supply to the FDC is two individual 50 lengths
of 2 ½ hose.
11Hydraulics
12- Attack Line using a Smooth Bore 1 1/8 nozzle
with 50 psi nozzle pressure.
- Formula GPM 29.7(D2)Sqrt of the Nozzle
Pressure. - 29.71.2656527.0710678 265.8 (266 GPM)
13- Friction loss in attack line of 200 of 2 ½
hose - Formula per 100 FL CQ2 / 10000
- 2 2662 /10000 14.1512 2 28.3024
- Friction Loss 200 2 ½ hose 28 psi
14- Elevation (head pressure)
-
- 5 psi per floor 8 floors
- Elevation 40 psi.
15- Friction loss in the standpipe system
-
- Friction loss in system 25 psi.
Note With the various size of riser pipes, (4,
5, 6) it is a generally accepted practice to
use 25 psi friction loss in the system to make it
easier to calculate desired engine pump pressure.
16- Friction loss in two individual 50 lengths of 2
½ hose supply line -
- Formula per 50 FL CQ2 / 2 / 10000
- 2 133/2/10000 1.7689
- Friction Loss in Supply line 2 psi
17Calculations
- Nozzle Pressure (50 psi nozzle) 50 psi
- Friction loss in attack line 28 psi
- Elevation 40 psi
- Friction loss in standpipe system 25 psi
- Friction loss in supply line 2 psi
- Total 145 psi
18- Engine Pump Pressure 145 psi
19General Operations
20- To ensure adequate water
- Supply the system from two pumpers, if possible,
- If the system has interconnected standpipe FDC,
supply them both, - If only one FDC present, supply 1st floor hose
outlet with additional line, - If building is equipped with a separate
sprinkler and a standpipe system FDC, supply the
standpipe first.
21Supply the Standpipe 1st
22- If the standpipe is equipped with
pressure-reducing hose valves, the valve acts as
a check valve, prohibiting pumping - into the system when the valve is open,
- A supplementary single-inlet FDC or hose valve
with female threads at an accessible location on
the standpipe allows pumping into that system.
23Operations
24- Engine Co. Chauffer
- Test the hydrant before connecting, let Engine
Officer and/or IC, know if the hydrant is not
operational, thereby causing a delay in supply, - Try to keep supply line to FDC not more than 100
feet, - Remove kinks and sharp bends,
- Supply the FDC with the largest available hose,
- Increase pump pressure slowly to avoid pressure
surges at the nozzle.
25- Use at least two supply lines to FDC if
- more than one attack line being used from the
standpipe or, - indications from attack crew not enough water
volume or pressure. - Use the floor outlet(s) to supply the system if
- leak in the piping at any point below grade
allowing water to drain off, - foreign matter pushed in the FDC,
- FDC inoperative.
26FD Connection
27FDC
- Safety consideration
-
- Do not put your hands in the FDC to clear debris
out, because it may have the presence of - broken glass,
- sharp metal,
- used drug needles.
28Cans, bottles, balls, metals and drug needles
have been shoved into FDC
29- Difficulties may be encountered with FD
connections. - These difficulties may include
- missing caps,
- defective or incompatible threads,
- debris stuffed into the connection,
- tight caps,
- female swivels out-of-round,
- frozen female swivels,
- and clappers either broken or jammed open.
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31- Many FDCs are equipped with either metallic or
plastic vandal proof caps, - these caps are usually attached with screw eyes
placed over the pin lugs on the female swivel, - both metal and plastic caps are removed by
striking the center of the cap with a tool, - caps can also be removed by prying one of the
screw eyes off the pin lug.
32- Some FDs use security caps, responding via
mutual aid, without the key, you will not be able
to remove the cap..
- therefore, you will have to supply the system
through floor outlets.
33- Knox registered FD s should request extra keys
for their mutual aid departments
FDC Plug
Key
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35Summary
- Test hydrant before committing,
- Use largest adaptable hose to supply system,
- Dont put your hands into FDC,
- If FDC is inoperative, dont waste time, supply
system thru floor outlet(s), - If supplying floor outlet(s), remember proper
fittings, - If your FD has security caps/plugs, make sure
responding FDs have keys provided to them.
36Prepared by Thomas Bartsch Chief Fire Inspector
(ret)