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London Underground Limited have commissioned Chiltern International Fire (CIF) to provide a test protocol against which manufacturers of water mist systems can test their equipment for efficacy in fighting fires in escalators. The protocol is titled "Escalator Water Suppression System Standard LUL EWSS TS1" and CIF have constructed a purpose-built rig for carrying out the test fires. Details of the procedure are shown below. |
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The enclosure used for the evaluation of
water mist extinguishing systems is a purpose built structure mounted at 30 degrees to the horizontal. The test rig is designed to show one zone of an escalator with timber cribs used
to represent the fire load of a modern escalator.
The test rig is designed to conduct large scale fire tests on inclined chamber
escalator water suppression systems in a physical environment representative of
those found in the general working environment of a sub-surface London
Underground Limited escalator.
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| | The fire load consists of four 3m long timber cribs made from kiln dried soft wood
timber with a 9-12% moisture content. Running along the upper open space in the timber crib is a 20mm wide filled with general purpose grease along its length. The cribs run along the same lines as the flammable parts, the wheels and
chains, of an escalator mechanism. The test rig is designed to give the levels of shielding to water spray found in practice and the crib structure of the
timber simulates the uneven surfaces of wheels and chain links.
Wind velocity through the rig has been matched to the maximum
found in the machinery spaces under the escalators. Air is forced into the test rig using a fan fixed at 30 degrees to the vertical in the purpose built housing. The fan speed is adjusted so that a hot wire anemometer reads a minimum 1m/s along the length of the test bed at all levels and at the exhaust opening. The increasing oxygen flow into
the fire encourages the spread of flame up the cribs.
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A total of 500ml of petrol is used to soak four 12mm thick, 140mm square pieces of
low density fibreboard on both sides. These pieces of fibreboard are attached to the
lower end of each crib using 20mm wide metal 'L' brackets so the fibreboard does not fall away on burning.
One litre of petrol is used as the ignition source in two horizontal trays with 20mm
sides and baffles at each end to stop the flame peaking at the centre. The petrol is lit
using a 1.5m long rod with a blowtorch taped to the end, by a competent person in
fire fighting personal protective equipment. |
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The main outcome of the testing is visual inspection during and after testing. During
testing the length of crib burning, not length of flame, indicates the size of fire in the
rig. This relates to the pass-fail criteria, which is to suppress or control the fire to prevent it increasing. The suppression system will run for 30 minute duration or until the fire is
judged to have been completely extinguished. Scotch Mist was able to extinguish the fire and therefore obtained a better-than-pass result in only a matter of minutes.
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