Hi Kyle It is true that sometimes the riser may be permanantly pressurised with main water.
At least in France, we may find inlets on those pressurised risers http://www.formationssiap.fr/colonne-seche-colonne-humide-dit-charge/ We have clear labels "colonne seche" (dry riser) and "colonne humide" (pressurised riser) seen from streets, so often verifiable. It may be interesting to refactor with emergency=riser_inlet + tag for dry/pressurised (to be determined) Pressurised risers may be different from sprinklers as well. Best regards François Le sam. 10 déc. 2022 à 10:35, Kyle Hensel <k.y....@outlook.co.nz> a écrit : > Hi, > > > > The tag emergency=dry_riser_inlet contains the word “Dry”, which suggests > that it can only be used for inlets into _dry_ riser systems. > > > > However the wiki says “fire department connection” is a synonym of the > tag. > > This suggests that the `emergency=dry_riser_inlet` can be used for other > types of riser inlets, not just dry ones, which is confusing given the name > of the tag. > > > > So, is the wiki correct? And if not, how do you tag an inlet into a > building where the system is permanently pressurized? > _______________________________________________ > Tagging mailing list > Tagging@openstreetmap.org > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging >
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