{"id":7254,"date":"2006-06-01T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2006-06-01T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/insulation.org\/io\/articles\/firestop-systems-contractor-quality-and-inspection-a-standard-process\/"},"modified":"2006-06-01T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2006-06-01T00:00:00","slug":"firestop-systems-contractor-quality-and-inspection-a-standard-process","status":"publish","type":"articles","link":"https:\/\/insulation.org\/io\/articles\/firestop-systems-contractor-quality-and-inspection-a-standard-process\/","title":{"rendered":"Firestop Systems Contractor Quality and Inspection&mdash;a  Standard Process"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>In March 2000, Mike Pfeiffer,  vice president of codes at the International Code Council, recommended that the  firestopping industry develop standards for quality. With that challenge,  Firestop Contractors International Association (FCIA) Standards Committee Chair  Don Sabrsula (2000-2005), president of FireSafe of Houston, worked with  industry contractors and manufacturers to assemble and ballot the first  standard for firestopping inspection.<\/p>\n<h5>ASTM E 2174-01 Is Born, and ASTM  E2393 Evolves<\/h5>\n<p>ASTM E 2174, Standard Practice  for On-Site Inspection of Installed Fire Stops, was founded from the Quality  Process approach. It is designed to be part of the total quality protocol  needed for zero-tolerance firestop systems installation. Firestop manufacturers  test their products, manufactured to strict tolerances, and publish systems  suitable for use as firestops in the Underwriters Laboratories, Inc. (UL),  Omega Point Laboratories, Inc. (OPL), Warnock Hersey International (WHI), and  Factory Mutual Research Corporation (FM) approvals directories.<\/p>\n<p>Construction process quality is a  topic of increasing awareness in the construction industry. Recently,  construction quality has been compared to the manufacturing industry, most  notably in Engineering News Record; in the keynote presentation at the  Construction Specifications Institute (CSI) Show<sup style=\"font-size: smaller;\">&trade;<\/sup> and Convention in Chicago in  April 2005, delivered by Patrick MacLeamy, chief executive officer of Hellmuth,  Obata, and Kassabaum (HOK) Worldwide.<\/p>\n<p>To provide a construction  installation protocol program, FCIA created a standard for quality process in  the construction subcontracting industry: FM 4991, Standard for the Approval of  Firestop Contractors; with ASTM E2174-01, Standard Practice for On-Site  Inspection of Installed Fire Stops. Later, ASTM E2174-01 was updated to ASTM  E2174-04. The standard then became augmented with one for inspection of joint  systems for walltops, expansion and construction joints, plus perimeter fire  protection: ASTM E2393-04, Standard Practice for On-Site Inspection of  Installed Fire Resistive Joint Systems and Perimeter Fire Barriers.<\/p>\n<p>FM 4991, also listed nationally  in many specifications due to reference in MasterSpec and Building Systems  Design, Inc. (BSD) SpecLink, is a quality process audit program wherein the  contractor has a designated responsible individual (DRI). The DRI passes an  industry test based on the Firestop Industry Manual of Practice (MOP) tested  systems selection and the FM 4991 standard. The DRI manages the firestop contracting  firms&rsquo; processes, policies, and procedures to achieve installed firestop  systems that meet the tested and listed system requirements published in  testing directories.<\/p>\n<p>During the FM 4991 approval  process, FM visits the firm, audits to their quality manual, and then checks  the installed firestop system in the field through destructive testing to  verify the paperwork&rsquo;s validity. Follow-up audits are done yearly by FM, with  the same destructive testing employed by FM personnel.<\/p>\n<p>Effective quality programs have a  procedure for the production process and sampling to be sure the process works.  ASTM E2174\/E2393 are the check and balance that sample the production process  for firestop installation&mdash;FM 4991.  The FM 4991  program is quite affordable for a contractor. The initial cost is about $6,000  for the first audit, and annual follow-up audits are approximately $1,500.<\/p>\n<h5>UL Announces New Firestop  Contractor Qualification Program<\/h5>\n<p>UL announced the new Firestop  Contractor Qualification Program at the FCIA Firestop Industry Conference,  November 2005. On April 27, 2006, UL held its first testing of DRIs who would  manage newly qualified contractor firms by UL at the FCIA Education and  Committee Action Conference. Another testing opportunity will be held at the  Firestop Industry Conference and Trade Show, Charleston, SC, November 8-10,  2006.<\/p>\n<p>The new UL program affirms that  the subcontractor quality process is gathering momentum. Both the FM 4991 and  UL program offer audit inspections of the firestop contractors&rsquo; quality  processes, with field verification during an audit. Specialty firestop  contractors now have a way to separate themselves from others who have not  embraced the quality process.<\/p>\n<h5>Why Bother to Become Approved?<\/h5>\n<p>There are several reasons  contractors choose to become FM 4991 approved or UL Qualified Firestop  Contractor firms. Aedan Gleeson, FCIA accreditation chair, reports that  specifiers in the Northeast have added FM 4991 and ASTM inspection to projects,  with many of the specifications actually resulting in an FM contractor awarded  the work. &ldquo;We even looked at bidding a project in Dubai, United Arab Emirates  that had a requirement for an FM 4991 Contractor?making this program truly  international. Most importantly, contractors are paying attention to fire and  life safety through this quality process,&rdquo;   said Gleeson.<\/p>\n<h5>Contractor Quality Manuals<\/h5>\n<p>For a contractor firm to write a  quality manual, it must review its processes, procedures, and people. The  firm&rsquo;s organization processes are reviewed from the time the estimate takes  place to project award, through communication to the field, then installation  and inspection of the work.<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;Going through the FM 4991  Process and building a quality manual made us look at all of our processes for  efficiency and quality. We made many changes to what we do and how we  performed. The result is that we are a better company for going through this FM  4991 Approval Process,&rdquo; Bob Svoboda, of S&amp;W Waterproofing, Kansas City, MO,  recently stated.<\/p>\n<p>Contractor quality manuals must  reflect a firms&rsquo; procedures. Many policies are required by either FM or UL, but  each firm is unique in how it selects systems, communicates the appropriate  systems to the field, and then ensures that the firestopping is installed to  tested and listed system standards. Each firm will have its own way of handling  the quality process. It is the basis of the free enterprise system that each  quality program would be individual because the way a firm is organized to  execute a contracted firestopping project can be its competitive advantage.<\/p>\n<h5>Quality Is the Whole Process<\/h5>\n<p>ASTM E2174 and ASTM E2393  inspection protocols are a package, together with FM 4991, that affects the  installation protocol of firestop systems to result in better overall project  quality. ASTM E2174 and ASTM E2393 can be used without a specialty firestop  contractor or an FM 4991-approved or UL Qualified Firestop Contractor on  projects that use the &ldquo;whoever pokes the hole, fills it&rdquo; protocol.<\/p>\n<p>However, the inspection will cost  much more when used with the multiple trade method, as it is difficult to  manage anywhere from two to 40 subcontractor firms that touch Effective  Compartmentation with their penetrating pipes, ducts, cables, etc. Inspectors  tell FCIA that inspection costs rise dramatically with multiple trades and  varied field applications involved. The amount charged for inspection can be  staggering.<\/p>\n<p>From a contractor&rsquo;s perspective,  the complete approach&mdash;a specialty firestop contractor providing quality services for  firestop systems installation, with inspection by qualified inspectors to  verify that the process works&mdash;allows the best method, offering value to the purchaser of  firestopping through efficiencies in the process. Investment in the correct  contractor, with processes that result in documented systems installed in the  field, means that value is received for products, systems, and services.<\/p>\n<p>Architects, specifiers,  engineers, building code officials, and fire marshals should consider  specifying tested and listed firestop systems made by quality manufacturers,  installed by a specialty firestop contractor (FCIA member and\/or FM  4991-approved or UL Qualified Firestop Contractor), inspected to ASTM E2174 and  ASTM E2393, to make the total quality management process complete.<\/p>\n<p>Below is some FCIA-suggested  specification language from <a href=\"http:\/\/www.fcia.org\">www.fcia.org<\/a>:<\/em><\/p>\n<h5>Contractor Qualifications<\/h5>\n<p>Acceptable installer firms shall be:<\/p>\n<ol type=\"1\">\n<li>FM approved in  accordance with FM Standard 4991, Standard for the Approval of Firestop  Contractors, and\/or UL Qualified Firestop Contractor;<\/li>\n<li>Licensed by the state or local authority, where  applicable;<\/li>\n<li>Shown to have successfully completed not less than five projects of  comparable scale; and<\/li>\n<li>FCIA Contractor Member in good standing.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<h5>Inspection<\/h5>\n<ol type=\"A\">\n<li>Inspection should  be by an independent inspection agency employed and paid by the owner. The  inspection agency will examine penetration firestopping in accordance with ASTM  E2174, Standard Practice for On-Site Inspection of Installed Fire Stops, and  ASTM E2393. The inspection agency is to examine firestopping and determine, in  general, that firestopping has been installed in compliance with requirements  of a tested and listed firestop system, and that the installation process  conforms to FM 4991.<\/li>\n<li>The inspector shall  advise the contractor of any deficiencies noted within one working day.<\/li>\n<li>The contractor should  not proceed to enclose firestopping with other construction until the  inspection agency has verified that the firestop installation complies with the  requirements.<\/li>\n<li>Where deficiencies are  found, the contractor should repair or replace the firestopping so that it  complies with the requirements of the tested and listed system design.<\/li>\n<li>From ASTM E2174 and  ASTM E2393: The firestop inspector should not to be related to the installing  contractor firm in any way, including arms&rsquo;-length business relationships  including subsidiaries, distributors, manufacturers&rsquo; representatives, or  manufacturers supplying products for use in firestop systems.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p><strong>Note:<\/strong> FCIA is working with ASTM to develop a standard for the qualification of  inspectors.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>To provide a  construction installation protocol program, FCIA created a standard for quality  process in the construction subcontracting industry: FM 4991.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":[152],"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[43,289,24,301,291,27,31],"class_list":["post-7254","articles","type-articles","status-publish","hentry","category-technology","category-personnel-protection","category-contracting","category-design","category-association-news","category-distribution","category-fire-stoppingfire-protection","author-bill-mchugh"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v24.0 (Yoast SEO v24.6) - 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