What is a Waterflow Switch
The Waterflow Switch is a mechanical-to-electrical Fire Alarm input device; it tells the fire alarm system that water is flowing in the sprinkler system.
The fire alarm waterflow switch, a delayed action mechanical/electrical assembly, is a
conventionally wired fire alarm device.
The fire
department reacts with more urgency to a waterflow switch alarm than the way they react to other alarms.
A waterflow switch is the interface between the building's fire suppression system and the building's fire alarm
system. It detects water flowing in the sprinkler system and causes the fire alarm system to sound the
evacuation.
When the building sprinkler system activates, the waterflow switch has three main functions:
1. It notifies the occupants of the building to evacuate
2. It alerts the fire department that help is needed
3. It shows the firefighters on their arrival that water is being used, and, by sounding the outside horn, where to connect their hoses
The fire department considers the fire sprinkler suppression system to be a greater indicator of a real fire than
just the fire alarm system.
Not that they like responding to false alarms, they're used to fire alarm
systems going into false alarm. But unlike smoke detectors in the fire alarm system, the building sprinkler
system activates with heat, not just cooking smoke.
If heat has activated the sprinklers, and water is
flowing in the building's sprinkler fire suppression system, they assume the building is actually on fire; the
firefighters come into the building prepared for battle.
The waterflow switch is a mechanical/electrical assembly.
As it only detects the water flowing in the
pipes, the waterflow switch doesn't turn on or off the water. It just sets off the alarms by activating
electrical switches.
To detect the water's movement, the assembly has a paddle across the inside of the
pipe. When water starts moving in the pipe, it pushes on the paddle. The paddle is on a lever that, when the
water has pushed aside the paddle, allows a pair of switches to activate, after a time delay.
There are
two switches inside to set off two alarm systems:
1. The local fire alarm system -- It evacuates the building and calls the fire department
2. An outside horn/strobe -- It tells the fire department on their arrival that the sprinkler system has activated
The sprinkler system is a long water tank; inside it water naturally moves a little. The pipe itself can slightly
expand and contract with changes in water pressure, and air bubbles inside the pipe will compress more or less
with changes in water pressure.
As the water pressure momentarily increases, water can move the paddle
of the waterflow switch for a moment or so, and this movement could set off false alarms. This particularly
happens as the city water pressure goes up and down.
To prevent these false alarms, the waterflow switch
assembly has a retarder. The retarder is an air damper that prevents the lever from the paddle from activating
the switches, until after a specified delay. This time delay is adjustable from 0 to 90 seconds.
Pressure type waterflow switch assemblies, used in dry sprinkler systems, deluge,
preaction, or chemical fire suppression systems, activate as soon as the pressure of the
suppression system floods the pipes. They don't have a delay.
One switch inside the waterflow switch assembly is for the fire alarm system. It's wired Class B or Class A, and like a pull
station, sends an alarm to the panel when it shorts
out the IDC (Initiating Device Circuit). When no water is flowing, the switch contacts are
open, presenting a normal IDC to the panel; when water flows, the switch contacts close, sending an alarm to the
panel.
Often from the fire alarm installer's point of view, the labels on the flow switch are not
correct; so use an ohmmeter to determine which contacts are open when no water is flowing in the sprinkler
system.
The other switch in the waterflow switch assembly turns on and off the outside horn/strobe. It's
wired almost like a light switch on the wall. When water isn't flowing, the switch is off and the outside
horn/strobe is off; when water flows, the switch turns on and the outside horn/strobe turns on.
The waterflow switch is an alarm device. It sets off the building fire alarm system, and the fire department
reacts to the alarm as if there is a real fire.
Wired conventionally, it's a delayed action,
mechanical/electrical device.
For the fire alarm system, a waterflow switch is conventional. Learn more
about the conventional fire alarm system in the book Make
It Work - Conventional Fire Alarms. This book covers the basics of the Conventional Fire
Alarm System, and shows how Life Safety and internal supervision affects the fire alarm system.