Repeatability and reproducibility of fire tests for cigarette ignition of upholstered furniture composites
β Scribed by Marcelo M. Hirschler
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 128 KB
- Volume
- 22
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0308-0501
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
An analysis has been made to compare the repeatability and reproducibility of three tests for cigarette ignition of upholstered furniture composites: ASTM E1352, ASTM E1353 and NIST 851 mock-up. The first two of these tests are traditional methods designed to assess the potential of upholstered furniture components to being ignited by cigarettes while the last one, NIST 851 mock-up, is a new method designed to assess the propensity of cigarettes to ignite upholstered furniture composites. The traditional methods, ASTM E1352 and ASTM E1353 use a single cigarette for each determination and can be run in two ways: to obtain a numerical output of char length on the substrate (following the standard) or to obtain a pass/fail result for the substrate (practical use); the precision was analysed in both fashions. The new method, NIST 851 mock-up, uses 144 cigarettes for each determination (48 each on three substrate composites), and assesses the fraction of substrates that have been ignited (char length exceeding 10 mm), i.e. by a combination of pass/fail data. The analysis for actual char length was made according to ASTM E691 guidelines, while the analysis of the pass/fail was made according to a modification applicable to binary data. The precision of the test methods was as follows (in descending order):
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Letter to the Editor Dear Sir Comments on 'Comparison of the Propensity of Cigarettes to Ignite Upholstered Furniture Fabrics and Cotton Ducks (500-Fabric Study)' by Marcelo M. Hirschler.
Letter to the Editor ## Dear Sir Comment on Dr Marcelo M. Hirschler's recent paper entitled 'Comparison of the Propensity of Cigarettes to Ignite Upholstered Furniture Fabrics and Cotton Ducks (500-Fabric Study) ', in Fire and Materials, 21, 123-141 (1997).