Given that the fumes and particulates inside the "booth" do not disappear instantly when the door is opened, I would think it might actually be required to keep the fan running until it is shut off manually or with a time delay.I have a Small Garage that was turned into a paint booth. There is a dry chemical fire suppression system. Are door contacts required to cut power to the fan when the door is opened?? I cannot find anything that says they are??
No; however, the NEC doesn’t list all the applicable rules, and, depending on your local statutes, there may be more “features” you are overlooking. See NFPA 33 as referenced in Informational Notes (INs) sprinkled throughout Article 516. While INs are not strictly enforceable through the NEC, they are often enforceable through various OSHA rules.I have a Small Garage that was turned into a paint booth. There is a dry chemical fire suppression system. Are door contacts required to cut power to the fan when the door is opened?? I cannot find anything that says they are??
NFPA 17 is the standard for dry chemical suppression systems. Tulsa Electrician has covered most of what happens, although I'm surprised that power was cut to the control cabinet. Frequently the fan shutdown is done through the booth controller, and only rarely directly via the suppression system.No; however, the NEC doesn’t list all the applicable rules, and, depending on your local statutes, there may be more “features” you are overlooking. See NFPA 33 as referenced in Informational Notes (INs) sprinkled throughout Article 516. While INs are not strictly enforceable through the NEC, they are often enforceable through various OSHA rules.
Are those contacts on the booth controller or on the suppression system control head? Usually the suppression system control head sends a signal to the booth controller via a "fire" input on the booth controller and the booth controller handles all the rest.Everyone I have done has a set of dry contacts to control an air valve that shuts off the air to the sprayer.
OK, that's definitely not any suppression system controller I've ever seen, either personally or in the literature, and I've seen a lot.Here is a pic of an control cabinet I trouble shot. Door errors,drive errors. What a mess. Bunch of mfg defects.
Any way show spray coil in this one.
This is a pretty fancy setup. They must do some very high-end work.if the building goes into alarm all booths shut down. Supervised relays