"Let's install a sprinkler system" doesn't mean a single system. NFPA 13 covers at least six different system types, each designed for a different scenario. Wrong type selection degrades fire performance, increases capex, or complicates maintenance. This guide summarizes when, why, and how each system type is selected, based on 16 years of field engineering.

1. Wet Pipe System

The most common system. Pipes continuously charged with pressurized water; the moment a sprinkler activates, water discharges. Advantages:

Where used: Hotel, hospital, office, residential, mall — any heated building. About 85% of sprinkler systems are wet pipe.

2. Dry Pipe System

Pipes normally filled with 2-3 bar of compressed air or nitrogen. When a sprinkler activates, air bleeds first, the dry valve opens, then water arrives. Critical details:

Where used: Unheated areas — enclosed parking, loading dock, cold storage, outdoor soffits, agricultural buildings. Standard for parking garages in Turkey's colder cities.

3. Pre-Action System

Pipes are empty by default. Two triggering conditions required:

  1. Smoke detector activation → pre-action valve opens, pipe fills with water
  2. Sprinkler thermal activation → water discharges

Two variants:

Where used: Water-damage-sensitive spaces — data centers, museums, archives, library rare book rooms, laboratories. Double interlock is Tier IV data center standard.

4. Deluge System

Normally empty, with open sprinkler heads. When the detection system opens the deluge valve, all sprinklers discharge simultaneously. Purpose: rapid blanket suppression of fast-growing, intense fires.

Where used: Aircraft hangar, oil refinery, chemical plant, transformer room, flammable liquid tank perimeter. In Turkey, common in TüPRAŞ, BOTAŞ critical areas.

5. Antifreeze System

A special wet pipe variant. Portions of piping filled with listed antifreeze (propylene glycol or glycerin). Used in small areas (max 50-60 sprinklers) where installing a full dry pipe is overkill.

Since the NFPA 13-2022 update, antifreeze selection tightened; only listed antifreeze allowed and annual concentration testing mandatory (NFPA 25).

6. Water Mist System

Under a separate NFPA standard (NFPA 750). Uses very fine water particles (micron-scale) to cool the fire and displace oxygen. Works with far less water than sprinklers; water damage reduced by 90%.

Where used: High-value art collections, historic buildings, maritime rescue, yachts and ships. Expensive system but sometimes the only right solution.

Decision Matrix: Which System for What?

ScenarioPreferred System
Hotel, residential, office (heated)Wet Pipe
Enclosed parking garageDry Pipe
Data center / server roomDouble Interlock Pre-Action
Aircraft hangarDeluge
Hotel entrance (exterior + interior)Wet + Antifreeze combination
Museum / historic buildingWater Mist (NFPA 750)
Cold storage (-18°C / 0°F)Dry Pipe + Heat Trace

System type comparison in SprinkCalc

Wet/dry/pre-action/deluge recommendation by building condition, calculation, and PDF report.

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Four Common Mistakes I See in Turkey

  1. Wet pipe in parking garages: Cold cities see first freeze damage.
  2. Wet pipe in server rooms: Accidental sprinkler discharge = millions in equipment damage. Pre-action is mandatory.
  3. No air pressure monitoring on dry pipe: Slow leaks cause false trips a year later.
  4. Over-complicating pre-action: Double interlock is unnecessary outside data centers. Single interlock usually suffices.

Conclusion

System type selection is the first step of design. We can't start hydraulic calculation without balancing building use, temperature, water-damage sensitivity, and budget. NFPA 13's six system types should be selected consciously; the "default wet pipe" habit must be abandoned.

Sources & Further Reading

Core references: NFPA 13 - Installation of Sprinkler Systems, NFPA 750 - Water Mist Fire Protection Systems, NFPA 25 - ITM. Original NFPA post: NFPA Today - Types of Sprinkler Systems.

FS

Fatih Selvi

Mechanical engineer and software developer. 16+ years of MEP and fire protection experience.