3.6.2.1 requires a 1hr separation for a service room that contains electrical equipment that is required by the Electrical Safety Regulation to be located in a service room.
Can anybody provide insight as to when an electrical room will, or will not, require a fire separation? For either Part 3 or Part 9?
Thanks
Summary: the requirement only arises when dealing with liquid-filled electrical equipment (usually transformers.)
As you've noted, 3.6.2.1 says "Electrical equipment that is required to be located in a service room according
to CSA C22.1, “Canadian Electrical Code, Part I,” shall be installed in a service room separated from the remainder of the building by a fire separation having a fire-resistance rating not less than 1 h."
The main requirement in CSA C22.1 is for electrical equipment that contains "dialectric liquids." Here's the code snippets:
26-012 Dielectric liquid-filled equipment — Indoors (see Appendices B and G)
(1) Dielectric liquid-filled electrical equipment containing more than 23 L of liquid in one tank, or more than 69 L in a group of tanks, shall be located in an electrical equipment vault.
(2) Except as permitted in Subrule (4), dielectric liquid-filled electrical equipment containing 23 L of liquid or less in one tank, or 69 L or less in a group of tanks, shall be
(a) installed in a service room conforming to the requirements of the National Building Code of Canada;
[....]
(3) Notwithstanding Subrules (1) and (2), motor starters shall be permitted to have these quantities of liquids doubled.
(4) Notwithstanding Subrule (2), capacitors filled with flammable liquids of 14 L or less in each tank shall not
be required to be installed in an electrical equipment vault nor in a service room, provided that
(a) a metal pan or concrete curbing that is capable of collecting and retaining all the liquid of the tank or tanks is installed;
(b) no other dielectric liquid-filled electrical equipment nor any combustible surface or material is within 4.5 m unless segregated by fire-resisting barriers, with metal-enclosed equipment considered as providing segregation; and
(c) each capacitor tank is provided with overcurrent protection to minimize rupture of the case.
also
26-246 Dielectric liquid-filled transformers indoors (see Appendix B)
[...]
(2) Transformers containing a non-propagating liquid, suitable for the purpose and having a flash point not less than 275 °C, that are located indoors shall be installed in an electrical equipment vault, unless the following conditions are met:
[...]
(d) where the voltage rating exceeds 15 000 V, the transformer is installed in a service room accessible only to authorized persons
From what I recall when I did a deep dive on this a couple years ago, the only equipment that ordinarily/commonly has dielectric liquids are transformers - big transformers. What I did (and now do) is simply ask the electrical contractor to state whether there were transformers with dielectric liquids, or any other gear with dielectric liquids, and if so, what volumes.
Haven't hit that trigger yet.
(22.1 also allows cables with flame-spread ratings that don't meet code to be used in a service room with a 1-hour separation. Likely not to apply.)
But here's a bit of confusion for you: CSA 22.1 Rule 26-12 states, " Construction criteria for service rooms are provided in Articles 3.6.2.1 and 9.10.10.3 of the National Building Code of Canada. Where a service room is required by this Code, it must be separated from the remainder of the building by a fire separation having a 1 h fire-resistance rating,
unless the service room is sprinklered." Note that NBC does not make exceptions in 3.6.2.1 or 9.10.10.3 for waiving the fire separation if the room is sprinklered.
So here's my question - the way I read it, the *electrical code* says that if a service room is sprinklered, the *electrical code* does not require a service room to have a one-hour rating, therefore it doesn't need to by *building code* since the NBC essentially lets the Electrical Code dictate if a fire separation is required. Do I have that right?