EXO Fire Protection

Resources

Practical fire protection guidance for property owners, managers, contractors, and facility teams. Explore articles, explanations, and field-based insights covering sprinkler systems, fire alarms, suppression systems, extinguishers, inspections, deficiencies, and recurring service responsibilities.

Search articles, topics, and keywords like fire sprinklers, fire alarms, kitchen hoods, extinguishers, deficiencies, inspections, and compliance.

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Learn by Situation

Start with the issue you are actually dealing with

Many visitors are not searching by system name. They are searching by problem. These are some of the most common situations that push people into fire protection research in the first place.

I failed an inspection

Understand what a deficiency report usually means, how to sort urgent items from non-urgent items, and what should happen next.

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I manage a property

Get practical guidance on recurring service, documentation, tenant coordination, and system oversight for commercial buildings.

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I am planning a tenant improvement

Review the kinds of sprinkler, alarm, or suppression changes that can be triggered when walls, occupancy, or equipment change.

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I need recurring service

Learn what recurring inspection, testing, and maintenance programs are meant to accomplish and why long-term consistency matters.

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Need help with a specific fire protection issue?

Use these resources to understand the issue, then contact EXO Fire Protection for service, inspection, repair, deficiency correction, or project support in Southern Utah.

How Fire Sprinkler Systems Work and Why Maintenance Matters in Commercial Buildings

Automatic fire sprinkler systems detect heat from a fire and discharge water only in the affected area, often controlling or suppressing the blaze with minimal water release—frequently from just one or two heads. According to NFPA research, sprinkler systems operated and were effective in 89 percent of the fires considered large enough to activate them.

In southern Utah commercial properties, systems are installed under the International Fire Code as amended in Utah. Modern heads can be concealed for aesthetics while providing coverage for offices, retail spaces, restaurants, and warehouses.

NFPA 25 outlines maintenance schedules: monthly/quarterly visual checks of valves and gauges, annual testing including main drain tests, and multi-year internal inspections for obstructions or corrosion. In our dry climate, dust and temperature variations can contribute to issues over time, making consistent care important for reliability.

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