Fire Prevention Technologies NSW delivers a complete range of fire protection and compliance services. From gaseous suppression to kitchen, vehicle, and specialist detection systems, each solution is certified to Australian Standards – protecting assets, people, and industries across NSW.
In facilities equipped with gaseous fire suppression systems, fan integrity testing is often one of the most overlooked and misunderstood aspects of fire protection compliance. Although this testing plays a vital role in ensuring the overall effectiveness of the system, many building owners, facility managers, and contractors tend to prioritise suppression hardware over the integrity of the protected enclosure. This oversight poses a considerable risk.
A clean agent suppression system’s efficacy directly correlates with the integrity of the room it safeguards. If the enclosure’s integrity is not verified, even a fully compliant suppression system may fail to maintain the concentration required to effectively extinguish a fire. In more technical terms, while the system might discharge properly, it can still fall short in terms of operational functionality.
According to AS1851 guidelines, FPAS accreditation requirements, and EAHL licensing obligations, fan integrity testing has transitioned from an optional best practice to a mandatory compliance measure for facilities that depend on gaseous suppression systems.
More than just compliance, insurers are increasingly examining fan integrity performance as part of their risk management and claims validation processes. By ensuring compliance in this area, you can significantly enhance your facility’s safety and reliability.
“Without verified enclosure integrity, even a fully compliant suppression system may fail to extinguish a fire effectively.”
Understanding fan integrity testing
Fan integrity testing, also known as room integrity testing or door fan testing, is essential for confirming that an enclosure can effectively retain the required concentrations of extinguishing agents for the specified design hold time after discharge.
To conduct this important test, calibrated blower door equipment is employed to pressurise and depressurise the enclosure. This process accurately measures leakage paths and enables the calculation of the enclosure’s retention capability. At FPTNSW, we employ software modelling to analyse whether the room can sustain extinguishing concentrations sufficiently to meet the system design criteria. It’s vital for safety and compliance that these evaluations are performed systematically.
This process is particularly critical for systems utilising:
- FM-200
- Novec 1230
- Inergen
- Argonite
- CO₂ systems
- Hybrid clean agent systems
These systems depend entirely on enclosure integrity to achieve extinguishment and prevent re-ignition. Any uncontrolled leakage can compromise agent concentration within seconds of discharge.
Why fan integrity testing is overlooked
One key reason fan integrity testing is often overlooked is that enclosure leakage typically remains undetectable during standard operations. Unlike noticeable issues like broken pipework or alarm signals, leakage pathways frequently emerge gradually through:
- Cable penetrations
- Ceiling interfaces
- Raised floor systems
- HVAC modifications
- Poorly sealed dampers
- Building movement and settlement
- Third-party contractor penetrations
Over time, even small modifications to buildings can impact the enclosure’s leakage characteristics. Additionally, there is a prevalent misconception that obtaining commissioning certification ensures ongoing compliance. In fact, a room’s integrity may decline after the initial commissioning phase due to changes in operations, tenant improvements, or maintenance activities.
Many facilities mistakenly believe that if suppression cylinders stay within the prescribed test pressure tolerances, the system will automatically be compliant. This belief overlooks the need for effective agent retention. As a result, a serious compliance gap emerges, where suppression systems may seem operational yet fail to function as intended during a fire emergency.
AS1851 compliance requirements
AS1851 outlines mandatory inspection, testing, and maintenance obligations for fire protection systems and equipment. In NSW, AS1851-2012 is now a part of the fire safety regulatory framework for Class 1b and Class 2–9 buildings.
For gaseous suppression systems, compliance goes beyond maintaining hardware; verifying that protected enclosures can sustain required hold times is essential. Neglecting routine fan integrity testing can lead to various compliance issues, underscoring that fire suppression systems are not merely “set and forget.” Failure to undertake routine fan integrity testing can create multiple compliance issues, including:
- Inability to validate suppression performance
- Deficiencies in Annual Fire Safety Statements (AFSS)
- Exposure during regulatory audits
- Non-conformance with FPAS servicing expectations
- Increased liability following incidents
AS1851 emphasises documented evidence and traceable maintenance records. Facilities unable to provide current room integrity verification may struggle to demonstrate full compliance during audits or investigations.
FPAS and EAHL obligations
FPAS-accredited practitioners and EAHL-licensed contractors play a pivotal role in maintaining suppression systems to meet Australian Standards and operational needs. It’s essential to ensure the integrity of enclosures for optimal gaseous suppression performance. If room integrity hasn’t been adequately tested or documented, this could lead to increased professional liability, especially if a suppression failure results in asset loss or business interruptions.
For high-risk environments such as:
- Data centres
- Switch rooms
- Telecommunications facilities
- Battery energy storage systems
- Industrial process control rooms
- Marine applications
Fan integrity testing is regarded as a component of defensible compliance management.
“Fan integrity testing has evolved from a best practice into a mandatory compliance requirement for facilities using gaseous suppression systems.”
Insurance and risk exposure
Maintaining insurance obligations is now recognised as a critical factor in ensuring the integrity of fan systems through routine testing. Insurers, particularly those underwriting high-value facilities equipped with clean-agent suppression systems, require clear evidence that these systems are maintained and assessed in accordance with established Australian Standards. In instances where the suppression system fails due to inadequate enclosure integrity, insurers will scrutinise whether all necessary testing and maintenance responsibilities were upheld.
Without up-to-date room integrity verification, facility owners jeopardise their standing and may encounter:
- Increased premiums
- Diminished policy coverage
- Delays in claims processing
- Disputes over claims outcomes
- A higher risk of uninsured losses
From a risk engineering standpoint, insurers treat undocumented enclosure integrity as equivalent to unverified suppression performance. This becomes pressing in scenarios where the costs of downtime surpass the actual loss of assets. It is vital for facility owners to stay ahead of these requirements to safeguard their investments and ensure operational continuity.
Modern fire protection compliance has moved beyond simple equipment servicing to demonstrated system performance. Fan integrity testing provides measurable verification that a gaseous suppression system can actually perform under fire conditions. Without it, compliance documentation may appear complete while operational reliability remains uncertain.
For organisations operating critical infrastructure, maintaining verified enclosure integrity is a component of asset protection, operational continuity and legal defensibility.
As regulatory scrutiny under AS1851 continues to strengthen across NSW, facilities that overlook fan integrity testing may expose themselves to operational, compliance and insurance risks that could otherwise be avoided.
FPTNSW, your fan integrity testing specialists
Protect your people, assets, and operations with Fire Prevention Technologies NSW. We are New South Wales’ leading independent, supplier-agnostic fire safety partner. Our expert team provides risk-driven guidance and fully compliant protection throughout NSW.
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