Fire Alarm Wiring Topologies: Conventional vs Addressable, Radial vs Loop and Cable Specification

Quick Answer: Conventional fire alarm systems wire detectors in radial (spur) circuits with end-of-line resistors; all detectors on a circuit share one zone. Addressable systems wire devices on a loop (class A) or radial (class B); each device has a unique address and is individually identifiable at the panel. Class A (loop/ring) wiring allows the circuit to continue operating if a single cable break occurs. All fire alarm cabling must use FP- or PH-rated cable for circuits requiring integrity in fire. Red sheathed LSZH cable is the UK industry standard.

Summary

The wiring topology of a fire alarm system determines how devices communicate with the panel, what happens when a cable breaks, and how much information the panel has about individual device status. Getting the topology right at design stage saves significant rework later — the topology choice also affects the cost and time of installation.

The shift from conventional to addressable systems has been the most significant change in fire alarm installation over the last 20 years. Addressable systems now dominate commercial installations above a certain size threshold (typically 20+ devices), while conventional systems remain cost-effective for small premises with simple layouts.

Understanding both topologies — and the cable requirements for each — is essential for any installer working on fire alarm systems. The cable specification is particularly important: using the wrong cable type on a circuit requiring fire-resistance integrity is a commissioning failure and a BS 5839-1 non-compliance.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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System Type Zone Resolution Cable Break Tolerance Cost (Relative) Typical Application
Conventional radial Zone level only Loop disabled beyond break Low Small premises, < 20 devices
Addressable Class B (radial) Device level Loop disabled beyond break Medium Medium premises; simple layout
Addressable Class A (loop) Device level Single break tolerated Medium-High Commercial premises; multi-zone
Wireless Device level RF failure isolated to device Varies Retrofit; listed buildings
Cable Type Standard Integrity Rating Typical Use
FP200 Gold 1.5 mm² BS 7629-1 60 min at 850°C (EN50200) Standard fire alarm circuit wiring
FP200 Gold 2.5 mm² BS 7629-1 60 min at 850°C Long runs; power circuits
FP400 Plus BS IEC 60702 120 min Extended integrity requirement
MICC BS EN 60702-1 Very high (hours) Emergency lighting, suppression
Standard LSZH (non-FP) BS 6724 None Non-integrity circuits only

Detailed Guidance

Conventional Systems: Radial Circuits and EOLRs

A conventional fire alarm system consists of:

The EOLR is the monitoring mechanism. Under normal conditions, the panel sees a known resistance (e.g., 4.7 kΩ for a typical system). An open circuit (cable break or device disconnect) removes the EOLR from the circuit and the resistance goes to infinity — the panel generates an open circuit fault. A short circuit (cable damage, wiring error) takes the resistance to near zero — the panel generates a short circuit fault and may activate the zone.

Detection zones in conventional systems: Each detection circuit is one zone. All detectors on the circuit activate the same zone indicator. If zone 3 activates, the investigator goes to the area covered by zone 3 — but doesn't know which specific detector triggered until they physically check each one.

False alarm management in conventional: Limited. If one detector false-alarms, the whole zone activates. Isolating a faulty detector in a conventional system requires physically fitting an isolation resistor at the device, or disconnecting it (leaving the zone without that detector).

When to use conventional:

Addressable Systems: Loops and Device Addressing

Addressable systems connect devices on a loop or radial circuit. Each device has a unique address — set by DIP switches, rotary encoders, or (in newer systems) automatically assigned by the panel. The panel polls each device in sequence, reading its status (normal/alarm/fault/tamper) and controlling its sounder output.

Panel polling cycle: A panel typically polls all devices on a loop every 1–3 seconds. An alarm event is communicated within one polling cycle of the device triggering.

Device capacity per loop: Varies by panel manufacturer. Common limits:

For large buildings, panels support multiple loops (2, 4, 8 loops) to provide the required device capacity.

Sounder control in addressable systems: In addressable systems, sounders are individually addressable — the panel can activate specific sounders while leaving others silent. This enables staged evacuation strategies (alarm only on the affected floor initially) that are not possible in conventional systems.

Class A vs Class B Wiring

Class B (radial/spur):

Class A (loop/ring):

When Class A is required:

When Class B is acceptable:

Cable Specification for Fire Alarm Systems

Circuit integrity requirement: BS 5839-1 Clause 26 requires cables on circuits that must continue to function during a fire to have fire-resistant properties (circuit integrity). These circuits include:

FP200 Gold (General Electric type, Prysmian FP200 Gold, or equivalent) is the most common UK fire alarm cable:

Choosing conductor size:

Non-integrity circuits: Ancillary circuits that do not need to function in fire (remote indication displays, ancillary relay outputs) can use standard LSZH cable. This is cheaper than FP cable but must be clearly documented — never mix integrity and non-integrity circuits in the same conduit.

Conduit and trunking for fire alarm cable:

Cable Installation Principles

Route selection: Route fire alarm cables to avoid areas of high fire risk where possible — the cable serving a detector in the server room should not pass through the kitchenette. Where unavoidable, ensure the cable has appropriate integrity rating for the route.

Cable fixings: Use proprietary cable clips or saddles at 400–500 mm intervals on surface runs. Never rest cables on suspended ceiling tiles unsupported — they must be clipped or on a cable tray.

Penetrations: All cable penetrations through fire compartment walls and floors must be fire-stopped. Intumescent sealant or proprietary fire-stop collars are required. The fire alarm cable itself does not provide the compartment seal — the stopping material does.

Conduit bends: Do not exceed 4× the conduit internal diameter for bends. Over-tight bends damage fire-performance cable and compromise the integrity of the insulation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can standard white twin-and-earth cable be used for fire alarm circuits?

No. Standard twin-and-earth cable (T+E) is PVC insulated and sheathed — it provides no fire-resistance integrity. When PVC cable burns, it loses conductivity rapidly. All fire alarm circuits requiring integrity must use fire-resistant cable (FP200 or equivalent). T+E may be used for non-integrity ancillary circuits only, clearly documented as such.

What is the maximum loop length for an addressable system?

Loop length depends on the cable specification and the panel's power supply capacity. A typical 1.5 mm² FP200 loop can run to approximately 1,500–2,000 m total loop length (combined distance, going and returning). Beyond this, voltage drop reduces detector operating voltage below the minimum specified. Many manufacturers specify a maximum loop resistance (e.g., 40 Ω). Calculate actual resistance for the planned run before committing to the design.

Can I use the same cable run for detectors and sounders?

Detectors and sounders should be on separate circuits. This is because:

In very small systems (a single-zone domestic-scale commercial installation), combined circuits may be acceptable, but it is not best practice.

What is meant by "short-circuit isolation" on an addressable loop?

Addressable loop devices often include a built-in short-circuit isolator (SCI). If a short circuit occurs on the loop cable, the isolator in the adjacent devices automatically isolates the fault, allowing the rest of the loop to continue operating. This is distinct from Class A wiring — an SCI limits the impact of a short circuit, while Class A limits the impact of an open circuit (cable break). Premium addressable systems have SCI capability in every device; more basic systems have SCI at zone boundaries only.

Does the choice of conventional vs addressable affect the BAFE SP203-1 assessment?

No directly — both technologies can be used in SP203-1 certified installations. The assessor checks compliance with BS 5839-1, not which technology was used. However, if the design required device-level identification (for example, an L1 system in a large hospital where precise detector location is essential), and you used conventional wiring, the assessor would question whether the system meets the design intent even if it technically complies with the minimum zone size rules.

Regulations & Standards