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#123388 04/05/06 03:34 AM
Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 141
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Not everyone knows that fire-stop materials expand when heated, so they fill the holes left when cables burn away and open holes.

If the cable can burn away then the fire will travel thru the wall along the cable to the other side, making the whole exercise of installing fire-stop a waste of time.

#123389 04/05/06 06:53 AM
Joined: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,803
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These 'fire stop systems' incorporate an intumescent compound, usually based on melamine. Upon heating above a critical temperature, the compound expands, without sagging and produces a foamed-char product, based on carbon, when ignition temperatures pertain. This foam-char then acts as a heat shield, a smoke and fume seal and a gap-filler, replacing burned or melted components like wire insulation or pvc conduit. But only for a limited period. That's because eventually the carbonised char burns through. Hopefully, the delay in smoke and heat propagation gives occupants time to escape a fire.

Alan

ps. I might add that steel conduits might need to have an intumescent seal on their inside diameters where they penetrate a wall or floor in certain arrangements, as they could conduct combustion products or fire.

[This message has been edited by Alan Belson (edited 04-05-2006).]


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