I work for a small electrical contractor in Ohio. We do many different jobs, before my boss started his own business he worked for years for production electricians. We were hired to wire an addition on a house probably built around 1930's or 1940's.
We wired it and without giving it much thought didn't put in a smoke det. The inspector passed it on condition we install a hardwired, bat backup smoke in the addition(which was on our pass sheet from insp). So we rough in a smoke. This is going to be general use space, not bedroom or bathroom etc. A remodeler has since been working on the addition insulating, drywalling, siding etc.
We get a call from the homeowner saying we have the electrical all screwed up he now claims the inspector wants a smoke just inside the existing structure from the addition which happens to be the kitchen (doesn't sound like the best place) hardwired to the new one as well as one hardwired in the basement. And the remodelers were kind enough to drop a wire from our smoke to the basement.
Question?
1. What does NFPA require for additions to existing structures, when does it need a smoke? Based on Sq'? $? rooms? sleeping rooms?
2. When does the existing structure need smokes added? this is a 2 story structure with mult additions and lath/plast, would be no easy or cheap task.
3. Would the electrical inspector have authority to require smokes or is that all fire marshal? I think I understand the electrical inspector is only looking for correct wiring
4. We're not really on good terms with this contractor and think maybe he is mad because he didn't get to use his electrician and get a cut on that. So he tells the home owner we did it wrong. (just my opinion) Maybe we did, you tell me.
5. One last question, on an interconnected system you have a hot, Neut and Interconnect wire, how does the IC wire work? I'm no fire system expert, I know how to wire on new const. If AC is lost do they all signal together still or is that lost? (is it an AC or DC signal on the IC wire?) if it were an AC signal and it was tied it in to a general circuit in an addition, someone could have problems if they ever hardwired the rest of the structure because then it wouldn't be on an arcfault. While if it were DC running off the battery or durring power falures they acted seperatly they could be fed from different locations. Thanks Mainly a curiosity of how they actually work.
We wired it and without giving it much thought didn't put in a smoke det. The inspector passed it on condition we install a hardwired, bat backup smoke in the addition(which was on our pass sheet from insp). So we rough in a smoke. This is going to be general use space, not bedroom or bathroom etc. A remodeler has since been working on the addition insulating, drywalling, siding etc.
We get a call from the homeowner saying we have the electrical all screwed up he now claims the inspector wants a smoke just inside the existing structure from the addition which happens to be the kitchen (doesn't sound like the best place) hardwired to the new one as well as one hardwired in the basement. And the remodelers were kind enough to drop a wire from our smoke to the basement.
Question?
1. What does NFPA require for additions to existing structures, when does it need a smoke? Based on Sq'? $? rooms? sleeping rooms?
2. When does the existing structure need smokes added? this is a 2 story structure with mult additions and lath/plast, would be no easy or cheap task.
3. Would the electrical inspector have authority to require smokes or is that all fire marshal? I think I understand the electrical inspector is only looking for correct wiring
4. We're not really on good terms with this contractor and think maybe he is mad because he didn't get to use his electrician and get a cut on that. So he tells the home owner we did it wrong. (just my opinion) Maybe we did, you tell me.
5. One last question, on an interconnected system you have a hot, Neut and Interconnect wire, how does the IC wire work? I'm no fire system expert, I know how to wire on new const. If AC is lost do they all signal together still or is that lost? (is it an AC or DC signal on the IC wire?) if it were an AC signal and it was tied it in to a general circuit in an addition, someone could have problems if they ever hardwired the rest of the structure because then it wouldn't be on an arcfault. While if it were DC running off the battery or durring power falures they acted seperatly they could be fed from different locations. Thanks Mainly a curiosity of how they actually work.