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Conventional Fire Alarm Systems

Conventional systems group detection into zones wired back to a control panel. ESP MAGfire supplies the parts as panels in ABS or metal enclosures, ready-made kits, resettable manual call points, and a combined smoke and heat detector. Banshee sounders and sounder-strobes raise the alert, with weather-rated IP66 and IP67 options for outdoor positions alongside surface-mount units for indoor walls.

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How a conventional system works

A conventional fire alarm system groups detection into zones, with each zone wired back to a control panel. When a device activates, the panel shows the zone it sits in, pointing staff to the part of the building involved. This zone-based wiring keeps the layout straightforward, which suits many smaller and mid-sized premises where broad coverage matters more than pinpointing a single device.

What the range covers

This range supplies the parts as panels in ABS or metal enclosures, ready-made kits that pair a panel with matching devices, resettable manual call points, and a combined smoke and heat detector. It is built so a working system can be put together from one place, whether you are wiring a fresh install or extending what is already fitted.

Panels, call points and detection

The panel is the hub that watches the zones and raises the alarm. Manual call points let anyone trigger the alarm by hand, and the resettable type can be set back without replacing a glass element. The combined smoke and heat detector senses both a fire's smoke and its rising temperature, giving broad cover from a single unit on the ceiling.

Sounders and outdoor positions

Sounders and sounder-strobes raise the alert once a device activates, adding a loud tone and, on strobe versions, a flashing light for noisy or visually demanding areas. Weather-rated IP66 and IP67 options suit outdoor and exposed positions, while surface-mount units sit neatly on indoor walls.

How to choose

Work out how many zones your building needs, then pick a panel in an ABS or metal enclosure to match, or start from a ready-made kit. Add call points at exits, detectors across the areas you want covered, and sounders or sounder-strobes where the alert must carry, choosing weather-rated units outdoors. Free UK delivery over £99, worldwide shipping.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does conventional mean in a fire alarm system?

Detection is grouped into zones, each wired back to the panel. When a device activates, the panel shows the zone, pointing staff to the area of the building involved rather than the exact device.

What is in a conventional fire alarm kit?

The ready-made kits pair a control panel with matching devices, so a working system can be put together from one place rather than sourcing each part separately.

What is a resettable manual call point?

A call point that lets anyone trigger the alarm by hand and can then be set back to normal without replacing a glass element.

What is the difference between a sounder and a sounder-strobe?

A sounder raises a loud audible tone, while a sounder-strobe adds a flashing light alongside the tone for noisy areas or places where a visual alert helps.

Which devices suit outdoor positions?

The weather-rated IP66 and IP67 options are made for outdoor and exposed positions, while surface-mount units are intended for indoor walls.

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