There are intumescent collars and seals that are used with pipe penetrations to maintain the fire rating and integrity of the fire stopping.
<nods>
Hi Sconhome,
Boring, miserable, wet Sunday isn't it?
Well here goes another draft for a section of the FAQ.
BTW, I hit the 40,000 character limit for a single post last evening.
Dividing the Self Build FAQ into separate posts 1, 2, 3 etc. is my next task.
Moving right along...
I'm not certain all the types of collars or fire rope will work as intended in a domestic ceiling context, but some versions may.
The substrates the fire collars seal to tend to be much more robust than the single sheet of 12.5mm plasterboard in a domestic ceiling.
You normally specify collars and seals in commercial or institutional developments.
Thus they would be used in services penetrations in buildings where an active occupancy arises.
Otherwise they may be where active carers or managers can react to the initial fire alarm - a hotel, hospital or nursing home for example.
The sleeping occupancy of a house is not monitored and must first be protected and then awakened.
Long before heat from the fire has activated the smoke collar the occupants could die from CO or fume inhalation.
Its one of the reasons its so important to prevent interstitial spaces running continuously behind dry lining and into the floor void above the ground floor ceiling.
Its also one of the weaknesses of protection offered by FR30 hoods on downlighters unless they are well-sealed with paste and not just pinned.
Which in turn is another reason to use low voltage light fittings - less voltage in general implies less power to be used = less heat generated.
Mind you, in two of the fire scenes I have inspected it was a transformer that caused the fire risk, not the fittings.
One answer is to specify transformers which shut themselves off when there is a heat build up or short.
All of which attempts to comply with Part B will tend push up the price for MVHR/hybrid systems.
But achieving reductions in energy usage without taking steps to avoid increasing fire risk could be unwise at best and criminal at worst.
This partly why at Plan Expo 2009 I called on to the Government put some of those six figure civil servants to work producing a set of working drawings for a simple dwelling showing how to address all Building Regulations compliance issues in an integrated holistic manner, not just Insulation and Sealing.
The Government needs to stop simply raising the bar on Conservation of Fuel and Energy [Part L] in an isolated, simplistic fashion.
The DOEHLG needs to help establish deemed-to-comply standards for achieving Carbon Neutral Dwellings by 2013 or it simply won't happen.
FWIW
ONQ.