A dry pipe system is quite safe as far as false alarms go and pretty easy to draw up with a little studying. It won't be to code but it could help. That or hire a contractor to do it.
I designed fire sprinkler systems for 5 years after high school, definitely not rocket science.
A dry system only has water in the riser up to a dry pipe valve. The vale is held shut by air pressure in the system that is maintained by a jockey pump (small air compressor). The rest of the system is sealed and ~air tight~.
When I sprinkler head gets hot enough to pop, typically just that 1 pops initially, the air pressure in the system drops out which opens the pipe valve and allows water into the system, the water makes its way to that heads outlet and sprays.
If more heads continue to pop, more spray as the water equalizes to the next branch.
Heads come in a handful of temps, 155F -ish IIRC is pretty standard for non-industrial.
Piping is black threaded sch 40 or sometimes thinwall victualic systems.
Heads are typically spaced 10'x10' depending on the zoning and need, branches are typically 1" for a few heads, then 1 1/4", 1 1/2" depending on the amount of heads per branch. There are hydraulic calcs involved, still not hard math.
Inspectors test, in most states is a branch at the further end from the water source that runs to the ground and out the building with a ball valve on it. remove the plug and open the valve. stopwatch is started and it should take no more then 60 seconds for water to run out of the valve.
** I carried a NICET level 3 license back then, things have changed im sure but that is the basics, at least for Delaware, I am not liable for any of this hehe **