Ok, I am trying to figure this stuff out too. Reading over the linked post, I found the following relevant paragraphs (slightly edited):
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[li] NTTT (Civil/Environme) 14 Nov 06 14:50 [/li]
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[li] Water used to extinguish fire in a sprinklered building consists of:
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[li] 1. Fire flow, for fire hose streams connected from hydrants around the building?, obtained from IFC table, 2750 gpm reduced to 1500 gpm in the above example.
[/li] [li] 2. Sprinklers and hose allowance boosting the sprinkler system?, = (discharge density x design area) + hose allowance (250 or 500 gpm).
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[li] TravisMack (Mechanical) 14 Nov 06 19:47
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[li] If you have the non sprinklered building..say an industrial park, you must have a minimum flow at any hydrant of 2000-3500 gpm at stookey stated above.
If you have the sprinklered building, for example with ESFR heads, you would need around 1750 gpm (12 heads flowing at 1500 gpm + 250 gpm hose allowance
Now, based on my understanding, here is how the scenario works and may help you understand....
Fire occurs in an unsprinklered building. By the time the FD gets there, the fire is raging pretty heavy and the FD will be drawing a lot of water from the municipal supply - say at 3000 gpm to attack the fire. That is where the fire flows come in to play.
Fire occurs in SPRINKLERED building. Let's assume there are ESFR sprinklers to stay with the example above. By the time the FD gets there, the fire is suppresed or contained to a relatively small area (1200 sq ft or less) and the FD only needs to draw a small amount of water (to complete the final knockdown on the fire). The hose allowance that is mentioned above accounts for the relatively small amount of water that the FD will be taking from the supply in addition to the demand from the sprinklers. So, in this case there would be about 1500 gpm flowing from the sprinklers and about 250 gpm for the FD to finish the attack.
The scenarios are 2 completely different situations to try so show how the numbers are really independent of each other.
Hopefully that helps to clear up some of the differences for you.
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[li] TravisMack (Mechanical) 23 Mar 07 15:39
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[li] The sprinkler demands will typically include a hose allowance, and will also be at higher pressure requirements than the site fire lines. For example, a sprinkler system may need 300 gpm at 50 psi at the base of the riser, and 550 gpm @ 55 psi at the city tap. The extra 250 gpm is the hose allowance you are required to account for in calculations.
The site fire line demands are required flows at 20 psi. Since most water purveyors don't like the water main pressures to fall below 20 psi, this will insure that the FD has adequate water to go through the FD pumper truck while maintaining the pressure in the city water mains.
I can't think off the top of my head where you will find the quote to show they are not additive, but you will not find a quote that says they aren't. If you check the appendix B in the IFC, it indicates the site fire flow requirements. It does not say that you are also to incorporate the sprinkler demand to these.
I hope Stookey checks in on this. Since he is the resident ICC expert, he can likely give you a better point to look in the I-codes.
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[li] stookeyfpe (Specifier/Regul) 25 Mar 07 21:54 [/li]
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[li] See 2006 IFC section B105.2, exception.
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So, to summarize, when looking at NFPA 13 for sprinklered buildings, there is a Sprinkler Demand added to a Hose Allowance . This should NOT be added to Fire Flow , which is the number calculated using the relevant building codes for the area and is independent of buildings and their sprinklers.
1. Sprinkler Demand = water supplied to sprinklers
2. Hose Allowance = water supplied to fire dept from building’s sprinkler supply
3. Fire Flow = water supplied to community hydrants for fire dept use
Is this correct?