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Re: Why I Don't Do Service for Other Companies



In our State you must have a fire tech license to do any fire alarm work,
even residential. It used to be okay back in the 90's to do what you
suggested with a single smoke detector but if you live by NFPA rules it
hasn't been for a decade.
"G. Morgan" <alarmpro@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:u18ug2trth1gl6g0qpgfd30q0rmbfbuate@xxxxxxxxxx
> On Mon, 18 Sep 2006 13:50:03 GMT, "Roland Moore" <roland@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
> wrote:
>
>>I don't know if I'd own up to that.
>>You might want to read the NFPA book again but my memory says one in the
>>bedroomroom and one adjacent [hall] (some exception for small apartments).
>>On fire especially its all rule driven. Find the right occupancy rating
>>etc.
>>and go from there. There is a dB standard to meet of the head in the bed.
>
>
> One in the bedroom only on new construction is what I've been led to
> believe.
>
> --
>
> -Graham
> (remove the double e's to email)




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