jar546
CBO
In other than one and two-family dwellings, does anyone allow PVC to be used as condensate disposal when the HVAC equipment is part of a plenum space and the return ducts are not directly connected to the air handler?
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602.2.1.5 Discrete plumbing and mechanical products in plenums.
Where discrete plumbing and mechanical products and appurtenances are located in a plenum and have exposed combustible material, they shall be listed and labeled for such use in accordance with UL 2043.
602.2.1.7 Plastic plumbing piping and tubing.
Plastic piping and tubing used in plumbing systems shall be listed and labeled as having a flame spread index not greater than 25 and a smoke-developed index not greater than 50 when tested in accordance with ASTM E84 or UL 723.
Exception: Plastic water distribution piping and tubing listed and labeled in accordance with UL 2846 as having a peak optical density not greater than 0.50, an average optical density not greater than 0.15, and a flame spread distance not greater than 5 feet (1524 mm), and installed in accordance with its listing.
Also (gonna have to search more to find this, but I read it somewhere) the exception for "peak and average optical density" is less stringent than ASTM E84 and UL 723.
but appears to when filled with water
You will achieve different results if you test a pipe filled with water and when you do not. If you take a piece of plywood and test it, you will achieve different results from a dry piece of plywood and one that has been soaked in water overnight. The soaked plywood may even pass! That's a "modified" test.
So, ASTM E84 and UL 723 require full coverage of the 20 in. x 24 ft. test area. That would be, for example, a 20 in. x 24 ft. piece of plywood. PVC and CPVC piping systems "modify" the test by placing "a single row of four 24 in. pipe lengths placed end to end, with a coupling between each length followed by a 15 ft. length of pipe either water filled or dry" (see PMG-1264 for this exact language). A single pipe is certainly not full coverage. Full coverage would not produce the desired results. Do you know why they couple four 24 in. pieces to a 15 ft. piece? As the flame in the Steiner Tunnel moves forward, the burned pieces of the pipe (24 in. coupled) separate and fall to the bottom of the chamber, extinguishing the pieces and basically rendering the test incomplete.
UL 2846, new to 2018 IMC 602.2.1.7, is a fire test standard for plastic water distribution pipe and states in section 4.1 "There shall be no water or any other liquid in the pipe during the test." This is a test for a water distribution pipe requiring no water in the pipe during the test. Perhaps ASTM E84 and UL 723 need to revise their standards to mirror what 2846 says and include a general statement stating that other modifications to the testing process will not be acceptable.