Sometime in the far far away past I recall that composite panels such as; Panel 15 could not be used on non-combustible construction such as Type I or Type II.
Panel 15 has a metal skin of .010” adhered to an exterior plywood. These are sometimes used in openings of a storefront shared with glazing. I have also seen this as a perimeter fascia band on a building.
I am now researching similar type metal skin panels that are insulated and have a metal skin on both sides. Some of these you can change the substrate the metal is adhered to from a hardboard (wood product) to cement board.
Is there a Code section that addresses the skin thickness covering a combustible product?
Can you use a metal composite panel with a plywood substrate as an exterior cladding or window opening filler on buildings that are to have a non-combustible exterior wall?
I guess if they comply with ASTM E84 then they can be used. Some of the ones I have seen are not showing the data sheet.
Surprisingly Panel 15 does comply with ASTM E84.
Panel 15 has a metal skin of .010” adhered to an exterior plywood. These are sometimes used in openings of a storefront shared with glazing. I have also seen this as a perimeter fascia band on a building.
I am now researching similar type metal skin panels that are insulated and have a metal skin on both sides. Some of these you can change the substrate the metal is adhered to from a hardboard (wood product) to cement board.
Is there a Code section that addresses the skin thickness covering a combustible product?
Can you use a metal composite panel with a plywood substrate as an exterior cladding or window opening filler on buildings that are to have a non-combustible exterior wall?
I guess if they comply with ASTM E84 then they can be used. Some of the ones I have seen are not showing the data sheet.
Surprisingly Panel 15 does comply with ASTM E84.