sanbap
Computer
- Feb 2, 2010
- 3
Our church's wet sprinkler system has frozen twice. The facility is used about 100 times a year, on weekends. On weekdays we turn down the temperature to 59 degrees.
The pipes that freeze are the ones closest to an uninsulated portion of the building that does not receive any heat. While we have tried to insulate that portion, we are not sure that the solution will work since that area is not heated. The rest of the building gets heated up to 59 degrees.
One solution that was given to us was to move over to a dry system. However, I assume that the change will be expensive. I was wondering if there is an inexpensive way of doing the same thing. What if the water is made to circulate all the time in the system? In that case, the water would not freeze. A pump that senses the outside temperature and starts circulating the water when the temperature drops below a set threshold, may solve our issue. I don't know how these systems work - perhaps, they are not designed to circulate the water. Maybe, that fix may also violate a NFPA code.
Thanks in advance for your answer.
The pipes that freeze are the ones closest to an uninsulated portion of the building that does not receive any heat. While we have tried to insulate that portion, we are not sure that the solution will work since that area is not heated. The rest of the building gets heated up to 59 degrees.
One solution that was given to us was to move over to a dry system. However, I assume that the change will be expensive. I was wondering if there is an inexpensive way of doing the same thing. What if the water is made to circulate all the time in the system? In that case, the water would not freeze. A pump that senses the outside temperature and starts circulating the water when the temperature drops below a set threshold, may solve our issue. I don't know how these systems work - perhaps, they are not designed to circulate the water. Maybe, that fix may also violate a NFPA code.
Thanks in advance for your answer.