EN 13501-1 is a classification system for construction products or building elements by using data from a series of reaction to fire test equipment listed below.
Single Burning Item | Flooring Radiant Panel | Bomb Calorimeter | Non-combustion Furnace | Small Ignition Test
FAR 25.253 is a worldwide standard for determining the flammability characteristics of materials & components used in aircraft. Test equipment includes at below:
Rate of Heat Release(OSU) | NBS Smoke Density Chamber | FAA Multi-purpose Small Scale Flammability | Aircraft Insulation Tester | FAA Oil Burner for Insulation Burn Through Resistance / Cargo Liner
EN 50575 provides unified requirements for power, control, communications, and optical fiber cables intended for installations in all types of construction. Test equipment includes at below:
Bomb Calorimeter | Flame Propagation for Single Cable | EN 50399 Test Apparatus | 3 Metre Cube Smoke Density Apparatus | Corrosion Test Apparatus
Test equipment for evaluating the safety of the Battery Energy Storage System in the event of a thermal runaway happened. UL 9540A includes the Battery Abuse Test, Gas Composition Test, Flammability Limit Test, Explosion Pressure Test, Burning Velocity Test, Heat Release Test, Smoke Release Test, Mass Loss Test, Radiant & Temperature Raise Test.
EN 45545-2 is the mandatory EU standard for materials used in the manufacture of railway vehicles. Its specified fire test methods includes Cone Calorimeter, NBS Smoke Density Chamber, Flooring Radiant Panel, FTIR Toxicity Analysis…
“Motis provided us top-class Cone Calorimeter to expand test capacity in a rapid response.”
- Yi-Joon, SGS Group
“Modern, automated test equipment greatly enhances our testing capabilities and reduces the burden on engineers.”
- Saad Ahmed, Falcon Laboratory.
”Through a series of comparison tests, we confirm that the MOTIS’s NBS Smoke Density Chamber has a very good alignment with international instruments, which has greatly accelerated our R&D progress and reduced our R&D costs through a series in-house smoke density tests.”
- Ann Chan, LUBAIR