jbelectrical
Industrial
- Dec 31, 2002
- 32
Electrical designers and engineers at the MEP firm I work at are required to design fire alarm systems, telephone, and on occasion, security systems.
I use the term "design" very loosely, however. For telephone systems, we provide locations for telephone and data outlets, telephone backboards/cabinets, conduits, etc. For fire alarm systems, we spot initiation/notification devices, panels, etc. and show a riser diagram. For security systems, we'll show junction boxes and conduit runs.
The problem is, I'm beginning to feel uncomfortable with the highly diagrammatic nature of my drawings. They're too laden with "Coordinate with contractor" type notes. Too much guesswork. Nobody at my office has an extensive knowledge of the above systems - they specialize in lighting and power only.
Can anyone recommend a book (Or several) that just goes over the basics?
I use the term "design" very loosely, however. For telephone systems, we provide locations for telephone and data outlets, telephone backboards/cabinets, conduits, etc. For fire alarm systems, we spot initiation/notification devices, panels, etc. and show a riser diagram. For security systems, we'll show junction boxes and conduit runs.
The problem is, I'm beginning to feel uncomfortable with the highly diagrammatic nature of my drawings. They're too laden with "Coordinate with contractor" type notes. Too much guesswork. Nobody at my office has an extensive knowledge of the above systems - they specialize in lighting and power only.
Can anyone recommend a book (Or several) that just goes over the basics?