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    fire-fabrication troubleshooting

    Sprinkler waterflow alarm with no fire

    Common symptoms: waterflow alarm no fire; false sprinkler alarm; flow switch alarm; sprinkler alarm keeps going off; nuisance waterflow alarm

    Stop and call a pro if:

    • this is a LIFE-SAFETY system — never close a valve, drain the system, or disable detection without authorization
    • impairing a fire sprinkler system requires an impairment tag/program, notifying the AHJ and the monitoring company, and often a fire watch
    • if there is any actual fire or smoke, evacuate and call 911 first

    Step-by-step diagnostic flow

    1. Step 1

      Is there any sign of actual fire, smoke, heat, or a sprinkler head that has actually flowed/discharged water?

      A waterflow alarm can be a real fire. Rule that out before assuming it's a nuisance alarm.

    2. Step 2

      Before touching anything, has the off-site monitoring company been notified that you are investigating, so a dispatch isn't triggered or cancelled improperly?

      Coordinating with the monitoring company first prevents an improper reset and keeps the system's response intact.

    3. Step 3

      Did the alarm coincide with a water-pressure event — a city main surge, recent pressure changes, or testing nearby?

      Wet-pipe vane-type flow switches have a retard/time delay specifically to ignore brief surges; a faulty or mis-set retard can let surges trip the alarm.

    4. Step 4

      Is the alarm recurring or stuck on with no flow at the gauges — suggesting a faulty vane/flow switch or retard chamber?

      A stuck or chattering flow switch, or a clogged/failed retard chamber, can produce repeated nuisance alarms.

    Possible outcomes

    Treat as a real fire — evacuate and call 911

    high confidence

    A waterflow alarm with any sign of fire, smoke, heat, or actual discharge must be treated as a genuine fire event.

    Safe next steps
    • Evacuate the building and pull the alarm if not already sounding
    • Call 911
    • Do not silence or reset the system; let responders manage it
    Possible active fire

    Notify the monitoring company before doing anything

    high confidence

    Investigating or resetting a monitored fire system without notifying the monitoring company can cause an improper dispatch or leave the building unprotected.

    Safe next steps
    • Call the monitoring company listed on the panel/placard and report you're investigating a no-fire waterflow alarm
    • Do not close valves, drain, or reset until coordinated
    • Then continue troubleshooting or call your sprinkler contractor
    Monitoring company must be in the loop on a life-safety system

    Likely a pressure surge / retard-timing issue — sprinkler contractor

    medium confidence

    Alarms tied to pressure surges point to a retard chamber/time-delay that's failed, clogged, or mis-set — adjustment is contractor work on a life-safety device.

    Safe next steps
    • Do not adjust or bypass the flow switch or retard yourself
    • Report the timing/surge correlation to a licensed sprinkler contractor
    • Keep the monitoring company informed
    What to document for a pro
    • Time of alarm vs. any known pressure event
    • Flow switch make/model and retard setting if visible
    • Gauge readings at the time of alarm
    Adjusting flow-switch retard is licensed work

    Likely faulty vane/flow switch or retard chamber — call a sprinkler contractor

    medium confidence

    Recurring or stuck alarms with no actual flow indicate a failed flow switch, stuck vane, or clogged retard chamber that must be serviced by a licensed contractor.

    Safe next steps
    • Do not disable detection or wedge/bypass the switch
    • Schedule a licensed sprinkler contractor
    • Coordinate any required impairment (tag, AHJ, monitoring, fire watch) through them
    What to document for a pro
    • How often the alarm recurs
    • Whether gauges show any real flow/pressure drop
    • Flow switch and panel make/model
    Servicing detection devices is licensed, authorized work

    One-time alarm, now clear — log and watch

    low confidence

    A single cleared alarm with no fire and no flow may have been a transient, but it should be documented in case it recurs.

    Safe next steps
    • Log the date/time and conditions of the alarm
    • Confirm the system is back in its normal supervised state with the monitoring company
    • If it recurs, have a sprinkler contractor inspect the flow switch/retard
    What to document for a pro
    • Date/time and any conditions around the alarm
    • Whether it has happened before
    Diagnostic guidance only. If unsure, stop and call a licensed professional — gas, electrical, and refrigerant work is hazardous to untrained users.

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