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The Arguments Against Sprinklers
MYTH: "Sprinklers are
unsightly."
BUT IN FACT: All residential sprinklers come in colors
to match ceiling and wall colors and can be recessed or partially
recessed.
MYTH: "The sprinklers
may go off accidentally."
BUT IN FACT: Loss records of Factory Mutual Research
show that the probability of a sprinkler discharging accidentally due to
a manufacturing defect is only 1 in 16 million sprinklers per year in
service.
MYTH: "Sprinklers heads
will leak."
BUT IN FACT: Sprinkler systems are under the same
pressure as the plumbing system but are tested at 2-3 times higher
pressure during installation.
MYTH: "If one sprinkler
head goes off, they all go off. Then, you've really got a mess!"
BUT IN FACT: Sprinkler heads are designed to react to
temperatures in each room individually. Normally, only the sprinkler
over the fire will activate. Data show that in residential scenarios,
usually one sprinkler will control a developing fire; in commercial
buildings, as few as three sprinklers will do the job.
MYTH: "They cause water
damage!"
BUT IN FACT: Test conducted by a Los Angeles Fire
Department and the US Fire Administration showed that damage caused by
water in a sprinklered fire is substantially less than damage caused by
fire department hose streams in an identical unsprinklered fire and far
less than damage caused by a fire which escapes early detection and
suppression.
MYTH: "Sprinklers are
just too expensive to install."
BUT IN FACT: With the development of quick-response
sprinkler systems which can be supplied by a home's domestic water
supply, a 2,000 square-foot home under construction can be protected
today by a system costing as little as $1,500 to $2,000 and an older
home of comparable size can be retrofitted for about 50 percent. The
cost is 1-2% of the home cost - about as much as to upgrade the
carpeting. more. importantly, there are numerous cost saving
benefits of sprinkler systems savings in construction code options and
insurance discounts which will offset the cost of installation.
MYTH: "Residential
sprinklers don't save lives."
BUT IN FACT: The evidence on this point is
overwhelming. There has not been a single residential fire fatality in a
residence with a sprinkler system in either Napa, California or Cobb
County, Georgia since the inception of those programs. There has not
been a single fire fatality in Prince George's County, Maryland in a
building with a sprinkler system. Scottsdale, Arizona credits sprinkler
systems with saving up to 52 lives since the ordinance passed in 1985.
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