Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about our fire suppression technologies, safety standards, and environmental impact.

FM200 (HFC-227ea) is a clean agent fire suppressant widely used to protect high-value assets. It is a colorless, odorless gas that extinguishes fire primarily by heat absorption (cooling the flame) and interrupting the combustion chemical reaction. It discharges in 10 seconds or less, minimizing damage to critical equipment.
Novec 1230 (FK-5-1-12) is a next-generation chemical clean agent. Stored as a liquid but discharged as a gas, it extinguishes fire by removing heat. It is famous for its exceptional environmental profile, possessing zero Ozone Depletion Potential (ODP) and a Global Warming Potential (GWP) of less than 1.
It uses a solid compound (containing potassium nitrates/salts) which, upon activation, transforms into a rapidly expanding gas-like aerosol. This aerosol contains micron-sized particles that interfere with the fire's chemical chain reaction (trapping free radicals) without depleting oxygen levels. It is highly effective and compact.
Extremely effective. Gaseous systems (FM200/Novec) appear to extinguish fires essentially immediately upon reaching concentration (typically within 10 seconds). Aerosol systems are also highly efficient, capable of suppressing fires with a very small mass of agent compared to traditional CO2 or inert gases.
Novec 1230 is the most eco-friendly chemical agent with a GWP < 1 and atmospheric lifetime of 5 days. Aerosol systems are also environmentally friendly with negligible ODP and GWP. FM200 has a higher GWP (~3500) but is non-ozone depleting and is still widely accepted where space is a premium, though Novec is often preferred for green initiatives.
When designed correctly (at safe concentrations well below the NOAEL - No Observed Adverse Effect Level), FM200 and Novec 1230 are considered safe for use in occupied spaces. They do not deplete oxygen to lethal levels. However, safety precautions, alarms, and delays are always mandatory to allow evacuation before discharge.
Nothing adverse. Both FM200 (HFC-227ea) and Novec 1230 (FK-5-1-12) have zero Ozone Depletion Potential (ODP). They do not damage the ozone layer.
The standard requirement (per NFPA 2001 / BS EN 15004) is typically 10 minutes. This holding time ensures that the gas concentration remains high enough to prevent fire re-ignition while emergency services respond. Room integrity testing is performed to verify this.
It depends on the scale. For small volumes or retrofits, Aerosol or Fire Stickers are often most cost-effective as they require no piping. For medium-to-large server rooms, FM200 has traditionally been the cost-leader in chemical gases, followed closely by Novec 1230. For extremely large volumes, Inert Gas systems can become more economical due to cheaper agent cost despite higher hardware costs.
Generally, no. While they are similar, the agents have different flow characteristics, weights, and operating pressures. This usually requires different nozzle drillings, fill densities, and potentially different pipe sizes or schedules. A system conversion requires re-calculation and re-certification by a qualified engineer.