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NFPA 1801-2013 Standard on Thermal Imagers for the Fire Service (Effective Date 06 18 2012).pdf

1、NFPA1801 Standard on Thermal Imagers for the Fire Service 2013 Edition NFPA, 1 Batterymarch Park, Quincy, MA 02169-7471 An International Codes and Standards Organization Become a MemberSubscribeto theRegister forSeminars, Webinars, and Online CoursesVisit theNFPA CatalogNOTICE AND DISCLAIMER OF LIAB

2、ILITY CONCERNING THE USE OF NFPA DOCUMENTS NFPAcodes, standards, recommended practices, and guides (“NFPA Documents”), of which the document contained herein is one, are developed through a consensus standards development process approved by the American National Standards Institute. This process br

3、ings together volunteers representing varied viewpoints and interests to achieve consensus on fire and other safety issues. While the NFPA administers the process and establishes rules to promote fairness in the development of consensus, it does not independently test, evaluate, or verify the accura

4、cy of any information or the soundness of any judgments contained in NFPA Documents. The NFPA disclaims liability for any personal injury, property or other damages of any nature whatsoever, whether special, indirect, consequential or compensatory, directly or indirectly resulting from the publicati

5、on, use of, or reliance on NFPA Documents. The NFPA also makes no guaranty or warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of any information published herein. In issuing and making NFPA Documents available, the NFPA is not undertaking to render professional or other services for or on behalf of any

6、person or entity. Nor is the NFPA undertaking to perform any duty owed by any person or entity to someone else. Anyone using this document should rely on his or her own independent judgment or, as appropriate, seek the advice of a competent professional in determining the exercise of reasonable care

7、 in any given circumstances. The NFPA has no power, nor does it undertake, to police or enforce compliance with the contents of NFPA Documents. Nor does the NFPA list, certify, test, or inspect products, designs, or installations for compliance with this document. Any certification or other statemen

8、t of compliance with the requirements of this document shall not be attributable to the NFPA and is solely the responsibility of the certifier or maker of the statement. ISBN: 978-145590447-1 (Print) ISBN: 978-145590494-5 (PDF) 8/12IMPORTANT NOTICES AND DISCLAIMERS CONCERNING NFPA DOCUMENTS IMPORTAN

9、T NOTICES AND DISCLAIMERS CONCERNING NFPA DOCUMENTS ADDITIONAL NOTICES AND DISCLAIMERS Updating of NFPA Documents Users of NFPA codes, standards, recommended practices, and guides (“NFPA Documents”) should be aware that these documents may be superseded at any time by the issuance of new editions or

10、 may be amended from time to time through the issuance of Tentative Interim Amendments. An official NFPA Document at any point in time consists of the current edition of the document together with any Tentative Interim Amendments and any Errata then in effect. In order to determine whether a given d

11、ocument is the current edition and whether it has been amended through the issuance of Tentative Interim Amendments or corrected through the issuance of Errata, consult appropriate NFPA publications such as the National Fire Codes Subscription Service, visit the NFPA website at www.nfpa.org, or cont

12、act the NFPA at the address listed below. Interpretations of NFPA Documents A statement, written or oral, that is not processed in accordance with Section 6 of the Regulations Governing Committee Projects shall not be considered the official position of NFPA or any of its Committees and shall not be

13、 considered to be, nor be relied upon as, a Formal Interpretation. Patents The NFPA does not take any position with respect to the validity of any patent rights referenced in, related to, or asserted in connection with an NFPA Document. The users of NFPA Documents bear the sole responsibility for de

14、termining the validity of any such patent rights, as well as the risk of infringement of such rights, and the NFPA disclaims liability for the infringement of any patent resulting from the use of or reliance on NFPA Documents. NFPA adheres to the policy of the American National Standards Institute (

15、ANSI) regarding the inclusion of patents in American National Standards (“the ANSI Patent Policy”), and hereby gives the following notice pursuant to that policy: NOTICE: The users attention is called to the possibility that compliance with an NFPA Document may require use of an invention covered by

16、 patent rights. NFPA takes no position as to the validity of any such patent rights or as to whether such patent rights constitute or include essential patent claims under the ANSI Patent Policy. If, in connection with the ANSI Patent Policy, a patent holder has filed a statement of willingness to g

17、rant licenses under these rights on reasonable and nondiscriminatory terms and conditions to applicants desiring to obtain such a license, copies of such filed statements can be obtained, on request, from NFPA. For further information, contact the NFPA at the address listed below. Law and Regulation

18、s Users of NFPA Documents should consult applicable federal, state, and local laws and regulations. NFPA does not, by the publication of its codes, standards, recommended practices, and guides, intend to urge action that is not in compliance with applicable laws, and these documents may not be const

19、rued as doing so. Copyrights NFPA Documents are copyrighted by the NFPA. They are made available for a wide variety of both public and private uses. These include both use, by reference, in laws and regulations, and use in private self-regulation, standardization, and the promotion of safe practices

20、 and methods. By making these documents available for use and adoption by public authorities and private users, the NFPA does not waive any rights in copyright to these documents. Use of NFPA Documents for regulatory purposes should be accomplished through adoption by reference. The term “adoption b

21、y reference” means the citing of title, edition, and publishing information only. Any deletions, additions, and changes desired by the adopting authority should be noted separately in the adopting instrument. In order to assist NFPA in following the uses made of its documents, adopting authorities a

22、re requested to notify the NFPA (Attention: Secretary, Standards Council) in writing of such use. For technical assistance and questions concerning adoption of NFPA Documents, contact NFPA at the address below. For Further Information All questions or other communications relating to NFPA Documents

23、and all requests for information on NFPA procedures governing its codes and standards development process, including information on the procedures for requesting Formal Interpretations, for proposing Tentative Interim Amendments, and for proposing revisions to NFPA documents during regular revision

24、cycles, should be sent to NFPA headquarters, addressed to the attention of the Secretary, Standards Council, NFPA, 1 Batterymarch Park, P.O. Box 9101, Quincy, MA 02169-7471; email: stds_adminnfpa.org For more information about NFPA, visit the NFPA website at www.nfpa.org. 12/11Copyright 2012 Nationa

25、l Fire Protection Association. All Rights Reserved.NFPA1801Standard onThermal Imagers for the Fire Service2013 EditionThis edition of NFPA 1801, Standard on Thermal Imagers for the Fire Service, was prepared bythe Technical Committee on Electronic Safety Equipment (FAE-ELS) and released by theTechni

26、cal Correlating Committee on Fire and Emergency Services Protective Clothing andEquipment (FAA-AAC). It was issued by the Standards Council on May 29, 2012, with aneffective date of June 18, 2012, and supersedes all previous editions.This edition of NFPA 1801 was approved as an American National Sta

27、ndard on June 18,2012.Origin and Development of NFPA 1801In December 2004, Dr. Francine Amon, Nelson Bryner, and Anthony Hamins of the Na-tional Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) hosted the workshop, “Thermal Imag-ing Research Needs for First Responders.” The workshop provided a forum to

28、discuss thermalimaging camera strategies, technologies, procedures, best practices, research, and develop-ment. Participants included representatives from the U.S. Fire Administration, InternationalAssociation of Fire Chiefs, NIOSH NPPTL, Naval Research Lab, thermal imaging camera andcore manufactur

29、ers, as well as first responder users and trainers. The need for standards wasclearly identified as a priority. In May 2005, as a direct result of that workshop, a group ofmanufacturers and fire service end users met to further identify the need for standardization.The Fire Service Thermal Imaging C

30、amera Operational Standard (FSTICOS) WorkingGroup was formed with Larry Konsin of the American Council for Thermal Imaging and MSAselected to be the Groups chairman.The FSTICOS Working Group was well populated with representatives from all the manu-facturers of fire service thermal imagers and image

31、r core manufacturers along withfirefighter/end users and trainers. The Working Group focused principally on the needs ofthe fire service for thermal imagers and set about drafting a needs, functionality, usability, andruggedness statement to begin defining the levels of performance that were deemed

32、neces-sary. Through surveys conducted at fire service trade shows nationwide, fire fighters validatedthe findings of the group. As the FSTICOS Working Group was meeting bi-monthly, Dr. Amonand her staff at NIST, with the assistance of the U.S. Army Night Vision Lab, began developingthe criteria for

33、image quality for fire service thermal imagers. The two groups met and col-laborated on a proposed document for thermal imaging cameras. In September 2006, theFSTICOS Working Group requested that the NFPATechnical Committee on Electronic SafetyEquipment (TC on ESE) work with them on the project. The

34、 TC on ESE agreed to create aTask Group on Fire Service Thermal Imagers, and many of the participants of the FSTICOSWorking Group requested to be appointed as members of the TCs task group. TC on ESEChairman Bruce Varner appointed TC member Robert Athanas as the task group chairmanand the following

35、persons as task group members: Dr. F. Amon, N. Bryner, G. Francisco, C.Gestler, J. Hays, J. Henebury, P. House, R. Klug, L. Konsin, D. Little, S. Lumry, T. McDonald,M. McKenna, S. Nixdorff, T. Tedesco, D. Wiles, and T. Wolf.During the development process, it became clear that the fire services opera

36、tional environ-ments were very different from most other emergency services organizations, which led the TC tochange the focus of NFPA 1801 to thermal imagers for the fire service. The proposed standard wasentered into the Fall 2009 standards cycle and underwent several development changes as the TC

37、worked with the very technical design criteria and test methods developed for this standard. Aswith all PPE product standards in the Project on Fire and Emergency Services Protective Clothingand Equipment, NFPA 1801 included requirements for independent third-party certification ofthermal imagers to

38、 ensure compliance with the labeling, design, performance, testing, and certi-fication requirements for the certification organizations and the thermal imager manufacturersto claim “certified as compliant” to NFPA 1801.18011NFPA and National Fire Protection Association are registered trademarks of t

39、he National Fire Protection Association, Quincy, Massachusetts 02169.The Report on Proposals (ROP) for NFPA 1801 was released for public review and comment on December 29, 2008.Following the public review period, which closed on March 6, 2009, the Report on Comments (ROC) was processed inthe spring

40、of 2009. The Technical Correlating Committee (TCC) on Fire and Emergency Services Protective Clothingand Equipment processed the proposed NFPA 1801 at their meeting in late May 2009 and approved the document togo forward.The 2010 edition of NFPA 1801 was recognized as one of the most technical docum

41、ents assembled and releasedunder the NFPA Fire and Emergency Services Protective Clothing and Equipment Project to date. The image qualitytests that were developed specifically for the standard were complicated due to their highly technical nature, and thedegree to which they were reproducible from

42、testing laboratory to testing laboratory was in question.The TC sought the assistance and resources of the Fire Protection Research Foundation to coordinate a series ofround robin tests to determine the lab-to-lab repeatability of the image quality tests. The project was conducted by Dr.Francine Amo

43、n, Ph.D., who began this project while employed by the National Institute of Standards and Technology(NIST). The remainder of the testing was conducted by Chad Morey of Intertek Testing Services of Cortland, NewYork. Additional sponsorship of the project came from Draeger Safety, Honeywell First Res

44、ponder Products, ISGInfrasys, MSA, and Scott Safety.A number of changes that needed to be made were identified in the document. A Tentative Interim Amendment(TIA) and Errata were issued to address these changes. Ultimately, the TC decided that the best course of action was toimmediately enter the re

45、vision cycle for Annual 2012 and review the document for any additional changes.In April 2011, several thermal imager manufacturers began work to revise the testing issues. In June 2011, at thedirection of TC on ELS Chairman Bruce Varner, a task group was formed chaired by TC member Robert Athanas o

46、fFDNY and SAFE-IR, Inc. In an effort to identify and resolve these issues in an expeditious manner, the task group wascomprised of thermal imager manufacturer technical personnel (engineers from the thermal imager camera and coremanufacturers) and testing lab technicians. Task group members included

47、 Daniel Akins and John Morris (ISG INFRA-SYS), Landon Borders and Kyle Hawes (Bullard), Craig Gestler (MSA), Jason Patterson (Scott Safety), Jon Turner andBill Wilson (e2v Technologies), and Dr. Bernd Spellenberg and Travis Tedesco (Draeger Safety). The thermal imagercore manufactures were represent

48、ed by Humphrey Ha (L-3 Communications), and Bob Nishi and Julie Hoy Moreira(FLIR Systems). Certification and testing organizations were represented by Steve Sanders and Jim Rose (SEI) andJason Allen and Chad Morey (Intertek). Fire service representation included Bob Athanas of FDNY/SAFE-IR and Steve

49、Townsend of the Carrollton, Texas Fire Department.The first task group meeting was held on June 29, 2011 in Newark, New Jersey, where testing issues were furtherclarified and a course of action was developed and agreed upon by all the participants. This meeting was followed byseveral lengthy conference calls and many hours of research and testing over the summer months to meet a Septem-ber, 2011 NFPA 1801 Report on Comments (ROC) deadline.The last task group meeting was held in Austin, Texas on September 19, 2011, prior

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