Selection Guide
CA-FIRE · Fire Protection Engineering
11 min read

Wet Alarm Valve vs Dry Alarm Valve — Which System Is Right for Your Project?

A complete selection guide for fire protection engineers and specifiers: when to use a wet alarm valve, when to use a dry alarm valve, and when to consider pre-action — with a practical decision framework covering temperature, response speed, false discharge risk, and system complexity.

The choice between a wet alarm valve and a dry alarm valve is one of the first and most consequential decisions in fire sprinkler system design. Get it wrong and you either end up with frozen pipes in an unheated warehouse, or an unnecessarily complex and expensive system in a heated office building. This guide provides a clear, specification-level framework for making the right choice — and explains when a third option, the pre-action system, is warranted.

The Core Difference: What’s in the Pipe

The fundamental difference between a wet and dry alarm valve system is not the valve itself — it is what fills the distribution pipework in standby:

💧 Wet Alarm Valve System
Pipe contents (standby): Water — fully pressurised at all times
Activation: Sprinkler head opens → clapper lifts → water discharges immediately
Minimum temperature: 4°C — below this, standing water freezes
Response time: Immediate — no delay between head opening and discharge
System complexity: Simplest — valve body + standard trim only
Pipe contents (standby): Compressed air or dry nitrogen
Activation: Sprinkler head opens → air pressure drops → accelerator trips clapper → water floods system → discharge begins
Minimum temperature: −20°C — no standing water to freeze
Response time: <60 seconds (with accelerator, per NFPA 13)
System complexity: Moderate — requires air compressor or N₂ supply, accelerator, and air monitoring

The Primary Selection Driver: Will the Pipework Freeze?

The single most important selection factor is whether the sprinkler distribution pipework will be exposed to temperatures below 4°C — the threshold at which standing water begins to freeze in sprinkler pipes. This is not a design margin; it is a physical property of water.

If the answer is yes — even seasonally, even in just part of the system — a wet-pipe system is not an option for that zone. Frozen water expands as it solidifies, generating internal pipe pressure sufficient to split standard steel sprinkler pipe. A frozen wet-pipe system will fail when it is most needed — in winter, when heating systems may also be affected by the same fire that triggered the sprinklers.

⚠️ The 4°C Rule
Under both NFPA 13 and GB 50084, wet-pipe sprinkler systems are only permitted in spaces that can be reliably maintained at or above 4°C throughout the year. Any space that falls below 4°C — even temporarily, even in a power outage — requires a dry-pipe or pre-action system for the affected zone.

Where Each System Is Specified — Typical Applications

Wet Alarm Valve — Typical Applications

High-rise office & residential buildings — Fully heated interiors. One ZSFZ alarm valve station per zone riser. Fastest response. Lowest maintenance burden.

Hotels, hospitals, shopping centres — High-occupancy buildings with continuous heating. Multiple ZSFZ alarm valve stations per zone.

Heated warehouses & logistics centres — Large-footprint buildings with climate control. ZSFZ DN150–DN200 for high-rack storage zones with ESFR sprinklers.

Data centres (controlled temperature zones) — Server support areas and mechanical rooms maintained above 4°C. IT equipment halls may use pre-action instead.

Airport terminals & transport hubs — Large heated public spaces. Wet-pipe for departure halls, retail, concourses. Dry-pipe for external canopies and unheated baggage halls.

Dry Alarm Valve — Typical Applications

Cold storage & blast-freeze warehouses — Operating at −18°C to −30°C. Dry nitrogen preferred to eliminate moisture from the system side. ZSFC DN150–DN200 for large high-rack cold stores.

Unheated loading docks & external canopies — Areas attached to otherwise heated buildings but exposed to sub-zero winter temperatures. ZSFC station inside heated building; dry pipework extends to canopy.

Open-deck & underground parking garages — Cold-climate parking structures that experience sub-zero temperatures in winter. ZSFC DN100–DN150 per zone.

Unheated industrial buildings & roof spaces — Manufacturing plants with unheated sections, roof voids above heated production areas.

Mixed buildings (partial dry zones) — A single building often has both wet-pipe zones (heated interior) and dry-pipe zones (unheated loading dock, external canopy, basement car park) operating independently from their respective alarm valve stations.

Response Time — Why Dry Pipe Is Slower & What the Accelerator Does

Response speed is often cited as the main disadvantage of dry-pipe systems. Understanding why this delay occurs — and how it is managed — is essential for correct system specification.

In a wet-pipe system, water is already present in the distribution pipework immediately adjacent to every sprinkler head. When a head opens, water discharges within seconds — the only delay is the time for the sprinkler’s thermal element to respond to heat.

In a dry-pipe system, the distribution pipework is filled with compressed air. When a sprinkler head opens, the air must exhaust through the open orifice before the dry alarm valve trips and water can begin filling the pipe. Without any acceleration device, this air exhaustion process on a typical warehouse or car park zone can take 90–180 seconds — far exceeding NFPA 13’s mandatory 60-second water delivery limit.

How the Pneumatic Accelerator Solves the Response Time Problem
Without Accelerator
Sprinkler opens → air exhausts slowly through open orifice → dry valve clapper can only trip after all air has vented → water begins filling → heads discharge

Total time: 90–180 seconds
✗ Non-compliant with NFPA 13 (60-second limit)

With Pneumatic Accelerator (ZSFC Standard)
Sprinkler opens → accelerator detects initial pressure drop → immediately vents intermediate chamber → destroys differential pressure balance → clapper trips before full air evacuation → water fills system

Total time: <60 seconds
✓ NFPA 13 compliant

CA-FIRE’s ZSFC dry alarm valve is supplied with a matched pneumatic accelerator factory-calibrated before shipment. With the accelerator installed and correctly calibrated, water delivery time is reliably under 60 seconds on all practical system sizes — making the dry-pipe system functionally comparable to wet-pipe in suppression response speed, despite having air in the distribution pipework.

Wet vs Dry vs Pre-Action — Full Specification Comparison

The table below compares all three alarm valve system types across the parameters most relevant to project specification:

Factor Wet-Pipe
ZSFZ Flanged / ZSFZ-G Grooved
Dry-Pipe
ZSFC with Accelerator
Pre-Action
ZSFY Single / Double Interlock
Pipe contents (standby) Water — always pressurised Compressed air / dry N₂ Dry — low supervisory air pressure
Freeze suitability ✗ No — pipe freezes below 4°C ✓ Yes — to −20°C ✓ Yes — dry pipe tolerates sub-zero
Response speed ✓ Immediate — seconds <60 s with accelerator (NFPA 13 compliant) Fast — detection pre-fills pipe before sprinkler opens
False discharge risk Low — single sprinkler head trip Low — single sprinkler head trip ✓ Minimum — dual interlock available
Water sensitivity protection None — water in pipe at all times Moderate — no standing water ✓ Maximum — double interlock mode
Detection system required ✓ Not required ✓ Not required Required — integral to release logic
Air supply equipment ✓ None Air compressor or N₂ cylinder required Low-pressure air supply required
Pipe integrity monitoring Pressure gauges only — leaks visible when water escapes ✓ Low-air alarm switch detects leaks before valve trips ✓ Supervisory air switch — continuous monitoring
Maintenance burden ✓ Lowest — quarterly alarm test, annual drain test Moderate — air system monitoring, annual trip test with system refill Highest — detection system, solenoid, control panel all require testing
Initial cost ✓ Lowest Moderate — air supply equipment adds cost Highest — detection system + control panel + air supply
CA-FIRE product ZSFZ (flanged) · ZSFZ-G (grooved) · ZSFZ-Ex (SS) ZSFC with accelerator ZSFY single / double interlock

Practical Decision Framework — 3 Questions

For any given zone or building space, answer these three questions in sequence to determine the correct alarm valve system type:

Q1
Will the distribution pipework be exposed to temperatures below 4°C at any time?
NO → Wet-pipe is permitted. Continue to Q2.
YES → Wet-pipe is not permitted. Use dry-pipe (ZSFC) or pre-action (ZSFY). Skip to Q3.

Q2
Is accidental water discharge a critical concern? (data centres, museums, archives, irreplaceable assets)
NO → Use wet-pipe (ZSFZ). Simplest, fastest, lowest cost and maintenance.
YES → Use pre-action (ZSFY) — double interlock mode for maximum false-discharge protection.

Q3
For freeze-risk spaces: is accidental water discharge also a critical concern?
NO → Use dry-pipe (ZSFC). Freeze protection without the complexity and cost of a pre-action system.
YES → Use pre-action (ZSFY) with dry pilot — provides both freeze protection and false-discharge protection simultaneously.

Mixed Systems — Wet and Dry Zones in the Same Building

Most large buildings do not use a single system type throughout — they use wet-pipe for heated interior zones and dry-pipe for unheated external or sub-zero zones, with separate alarm valve stations for each zone. Each station operates independently.

Example: Large Logistics Warehouse with Mixed Zones
Wet-Pipe Zones (ZSFZ)
  • Heated storage hall (maintained ≥ 8°C)
  • Office and welfare areas
  • Heated mechanical plant room
  • Internal access corridors
Dry-Pipe Zones (ZSFC)
  • External loading dock canopies
  • Unheated goods receiving bays
  • External trailer parking canopy
  • Unheated plant mezzanine
Each zone has its own independent alarm valve station. The wet-pipe ZSFZ stations are located in the heated building interior. The ZSFC dry-pipe stations are also located inside the heated building — only the dry distribution pipework extends into the cold zone. This is the critical installation principle: the dry alarm valve body itself must always be in a heated location (≥ 4°C); only the downstream distribution pipework enters the freezing zone.

Dry-Pipe Systems: Compressed Air vs Dry Nitrogen

When specifying a dry-pipe system, the choice of supervisory medium — compressed air or dry nitrogen — affects long-term pipe condition and is particularly important in cold storage applications.

Factor Compressed Air Dry Nitrogen (Recommended for Cold Stores)
Supply On-site compressor — continuous automatic supply Cylinder supply — periodic replacement required
Moisture content Contains moisture — air dryer strongly recommended ✓ Zero moisture — no condensation, no freeze risk
Internal pipe corrosion (MIC) Higher risk — oxygen + moisture promotes microbiologically influenced corrosion ✓ Minimal — no oxygen, no moisture
Recommended for General unheated spaces — parking garages, loading docks, roof spaces Cold stores, blast-freeze, any below −10°C application
✓ CA-FIRE ZSFC is compatible with both compressed air and dry nitrogen
No modification to the valve body is required when switching between compressed air and dry nitrogen as the supervisory medium. Specify the medium to the air supply equipment supplier and set the air maintenance device accordingly.

CA-FIRE Wet & Dry Alarm Valves
ZSFZ flanged wet alarm valve DN65–DN300 · ZSFC dry alarm valve DN100–DN200 with accelerator · GB 5135.6 · NFPA 13 · Factory direct · Complete station assembly available

View All Alarm Valves →

Wet Alarm Valve
Dry Alarm Valve
Wet Pipe Alarm Valve
Alarm Valve Selection
Fire Sprinkler System
NFPA 13
GB 50084
Pre-Action Alarm Valve

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