Heat Tracing Entire Wet Systems

 

“Over the years the heat trace section has been evolving. Originally, small, 
unheated spaces were permitted to be protected with heat trace. The verbiage 
"small unheated spaces" has been replaced with unheated spaces. As worded, it 
would appear an entire wet pipe system, installed in an unheated space, can be 
protected from freezing using heat trace. What is the intent as to how much of 
a system can be protected with heat trace based on the omission of "small”?”

 

We have reviewed NFPA 13, 2016 edition that you indicated as the applicable 
standard. Our informal interpretation is that heat tracing is permitted for 
entire wet systems.

 

The standard does not say that you cannot use heat tracing on the entire wet 
sprinkler system. Section 7.1.4 prevents you from using heat tracing to protect 
the system’s risers from freezing. Also, sections 8.16.4.1.4.1 indicates that 
when using heat tracing to protect branch lines from freezing, it must be 
listed for such use. Also, the heat tracing must be electronically supervised 
to provide the positive confirmation that the circuit is energized per section 
8.16.4.1.4.2. Additional commentary from the handbook’s Designer Corner under 
Section 8.16.4.1.1 states, “In recent editions, NFPA 13 has been modified to 
allow heat tracing on branch lines. Previous editions prohibited heat tracing 
on branch lines due to concerns over the potential to heat the sprinkler to its 
operating temperature and the insulation becoming an obstruction to the 
sprinkler discharge. Underwriters Laboratories (UL) worked closely with the 
IEEE to make changes to the listing process required for heat tracing. When 
heat tracing specifically listed for sprinkler system branch lines is used in 
accordance with its listing, the concerns are minimized and it is acceptable to 
NFPA 13.” As such, there are no imposed limits on the size of a system that can 
be protected with heat tracing other than economics).

  

------------

Technical Update is prepared by the Technical Services Dept. of the AFSA: 
Roland Huggins, a PE registered in fire protection engineering, Vice President 
of Engineering and Technical Services; and Tom Wellen, a PE registered in fire 
protection engineering and Tom Noble E.T., a Technical Programs Specialist. 
This is provided with the understanding that the AFSA assumes no liability for 
this opinion or actions taken on it and they are not to be considered the 
official position of the NFPA or its technical committees.

 

Copyright 2017, American Fire Sprinkler Association. All Rights Reserved.


-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: 
<http://lists.firesprinkler.org/private.cgi/sprinklernotes-firesprinkler.org/attachments/20170206/8cbf7c98/attachment.htm>

Reply via email to