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In today’s world we have become increasingly dependent on electronic computer/data processing equipment as a tool to perform tasks and process information vital to the financial success of the organization. Clean Agents put out the fire and protect data in process, reduce equipment damage, and facilitate return to service.

BFPE can assist you in deciding which suppression system is right for your environment. They keep up with the latest technology and fire regulations. BFPE can help you engineer a system, install it, and service it. In one place you can meet all of your high-tech fire protection needs. 



When you need a Better Protection

Telecommunications Facilities

Data Processing Equipment Spaces

Control Rooms

Computer Rooms

Record / Archive Storage

Museums

Medical Equipment Rooms

Marine Shipboard Systems

Automotive

Petroleum

Transportation

Switch Gear Rooms

Battery Rooms

High Density/High Value Areas

Delicate Electrical Equipment

Industrial Control Rooms

Flammable Liquid Storage

 

 

 

 

 




Environmentally-friendly. The preferred fire suppression system for vital facilities that can't afford fire-related business interruption of process controls, automated industrial operations, robotics, etc. Active on fire, but inert on people; non-toxic when used per NFPA Standard 2001. Safe, no-residue protection for Class A, B and C fires. Every Kidde system checked for design accuracy. Designed for maximum protection with minimum hardware; less space, lower cost. UL Listed and Factory Mutual approved.

The chemical name of the new agent was heptafluoropropane – CF3-CHF-CF3 / HFC-227ea - trade name of the agent, FM-200 is safe for people and valuable assets, and validated by independent approvals. FM-200’s mechanism is primary action physically cooling fire at the molecular level. FM-200 literally removes heat energy from the fire to the extent that the combustion reaction cannot sustain itself. Additionally, there is a chemical extinguishing action contributed by FM-200. Trace amounts of free radicals are released in a fire, ultimately inhibiting the chain reaction of combustion.

Designed for harsh and demanding applications; low temperature environments (locomotives, mining equipment, unheated storage), high ceiling structures (warehouses) or hazards requiring high concentration inerting (flammable liquid storage, turbine enclosures). Low boiling point and high vapor pressure mean efective suppression where other agents fail. Ceiling heights to 25 feet. FE-13 is clean, safe and fast acting, with no EPA restrictions.

INERGEN is a gaseous fire extinguishing agent comprised of the naturally occurring gases nitrogen (52%), argon (40%), and carbon dioxide (8%). One of the most remarkable aspects of INERGEN agent is that it removes enough oxygen from the air to extinguish fire, yet people are still able to breathe comfortably. Another advantage of INERGEN agent is that it won’t produce a fog, so escape routes remain visible and is nontoxic. In fact, actual fire performance tests have documented extinguishments in as little as 22 seconds on Class A fires and as little as 17 seconds on Class B fires.

Recommended for protection of unoccupied facilities. Economical, computer-designed and engineered; using total flooding, hand hose line and/or local application. The most technologically advanced CO2 fire suppression systems available. Colorless, odorless and electrically nonconductive. Rapid cleanup equals minimal downtime.

The MicroMist system is a self-contained, single-fluid, pre-engineered water mist fire suppression system for total compartment protection of machinery spaces and compartmentalized gas turbine generators. The MicroMist has demonstrated excellent performance extinguishing flammable liquid (Class B) fire scenarios.

Halon 1301 is a colorless, odorless, and non-toxic gas that extinguishes a fire by chemically reacting with the combustion process. When a fire is detected the chemical, which is stored as a pressurized liquid, is released from the storage cylinder(s) as a liquid and gas mixture. The liquid fraction is superheated and flashes into the vapor phase. This hastens the "total flooding," with the agent rapidly distributed through-out the protected space. When the concentration of Halon 1301 reaches its effective level (typically between 5% - 7%), the fire is extinguished. 

or maintenance.