Fire Detection and Alarm Systems
Interlinked, conventional and SAV wire installations
Having a fire alarm system in your house or property should be one of the most important things you ever purchase. Acting as a warning system when smoke or fire are present, a fire alarm can save your family, home and possessions by acting as an early intervention to make you aware of any danger.
Fire Alarm systems can include devices such as:-
- Smoke detectors
- Heat detectors
- Carbon monoxide detectors
- Carbon dioxide monitors
- Optical alarms (light sensor)
- Fire alarm control panels
- Manual fire alarm activation
- Break glass call points
- Voice alarm communication systems
- Disability alarms
- Manual and automatic fire alarm systems.
- Testing and commissioning
- Wireless systems
We can provide site surveys, full installation as well as maintenance and testing for all domestic, commercial and industrial properties. As fire alarms provide such a fundamentally significant role within our homes or businesses it is imperative that they are tested and inspected on a regular basis.
Landlord Requirements
New Legislation came into force in 2015 for Private Landlords regarding smoke and carbon monoxide alarms. Under new legislation landlords are required to ensure the following:-
- Landlords must fit a hardwired interlinked smoke alarm on every storey and within every principle living area of a rental property
- Landlords must fit a carbon monoxide (CO) alarm in every room with a usable fire place or solid fuel stove
- Landlords must fit a carbon monoxide (CO) alarm in a room containing a boiler
- Alarms must be tested and ensured working at the start of each new tenancy
- Penalties of up to £5000 to be imposed on Landlords not following legislation

If you are the homeowner and it is not a rental property it is suggested every 10 years, however if you have any concerns seek professional advice
If you are the homeowner and it is not a rental property it is suggested every 10 years, however if you have any concerns seek professional advice
Landlords are require to put a smoke detector on every storey of a rental property and a CO detector in every room where there is a working fireplace or solid fuel appliance.
An Electrical Installation certificate is done for a new installation or an addition, an Electrical Installation Condition Report is a report on the current wiring in a building without making any alterations to it mainly to check on its “condition”.
A standard bedroom should have a minimum of 3 sockets, although we would always suggest that the 3 sockets should be fitted as twin, giving the user more flexibility and preventing the likelihood of using dangerous extensions. In other parts of the house, socket numbers can vary depending on room size and function. If you have any further questions call the office 01796 472263
Yes, under BS7671 IEE Wiring Regulations all socket outlets are required to be protected by a 30mA RCD. This acts as a safety mechanism in case of an accident the RCD automatically shuts off the power.
The simple answer if you have a commercial or industrial property, then yes. BS 5266 enforces the provision of emergency lighting for public buildings such as: Leisure centres, Theatres, Cinemas, Nightclubs/Pubs, Hotels/Restaurants, Retail stores There is also a legal requirement that every workplace should have suitable and sufficient emergency lighting and that suitable and sufficient emergency lighting shall be provided and maintained in any room in which persons at work are specifically exposed to danger in the event of failure of artificial lighting.
It is important to be compliant with health and safety regulations and make sure that any wiring or power device within a property meets with the most current regulations. By maintaining wiring, distribution boards etc. it also ensures peace of mind. By checking and maintaining power systems within our property we reduce the risk of overloading devices, fire risks, making sure wiring is safe and no items are obsolete or pose any risk.
An RCD is a residual current device designed to protect against electrocution and electrical fires but cutting of the power supply when it senses a leakage of an electrical current from a circuit. An RCD monitors electric currents in one or more circuits or in an individual item by monitoring the live and neutral wires. These two wires normally have an equal value but if a fault occurs and the electricity it is monitoring changes to a different path this would trigger the RCD to switch off the electricity automatically. For example, cutting through a cable with a power tool, providing the power tool was plugged into a socket or a circuit which was RCD protected the power would switch off and eliminate the chances of injury from electrocution. RCD protection also offer protection against electrical fires.
The main form of RCD protection is in your consumer unit. The number of circuits being protected can vary and be altered to suit your needs when an installation is being carried out. You may only want to RCD protect your downstairs circuits. You can also get RCD protected plug in sockets than are transportable, you can plug them in to any socket in your house, offering you protection whenever and wherever you need it, or you can have an external socket made RCD so you are always protected when using any gardening equipment.







Frost protection or trace heating involve protecting certain areas in or around the...
