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Fire-Rated / 10 December 2024 / 2 min read

Fire-Rated Sealing: What Property Managers Need to Know

Fire-rated joint sealing should be scoped from the building requirement, joint details, photos, access, and documentation expectations. It is not normal caulking with a different label.

Cover image for Fire-Rated Sealing: What Property Managers Need to Know

Start with the requirement: fire-rated sealing needs clear project information before pricing. The joint, wall or floor assembly, required system, access, and documentation expectations should be confirmed for the job.

Why property managers should avoid vague requests

A request that says "fire seal some gaps" is not enough. Fire-rated sealing is tied to the building requirement and the tested system. The scope needs to be clear enough that the right product and installation approach can be selected.

Information to collect before sending the job out

  • Photos of the gap, joint, or affected area.
  • Marked-up locations or a defect notice if one exists.
  • Any known FRL, wall/floor assembly, or project specification.
  • Access notes, tenancy timing, and whether areas are occupied.
  • Documentation or handover expectations.

The product follows the tested system

The required fire-rated product and system depend on the actual joint or penetration and the required performance. Standard silicone or polyurethane is not a substitute for a fire-rated scope.

Keep the request clear for everyone involved

For strata, commercial, and maintenance work across Brisbane and Moreton Bay, the quote process should reduce confusion for owners, tenants, site contacts, and managers. The clearer the first request, the easier it is to work out whether CaulkTech can quote the scope and what information is still missing.

CaulkTech can quote suitable fire-rated joint sealing scopes where the project detail and documentation expectations are clear. Compliance documentation and sign-off requirements should be confirmed for each job.

What to send Brandon

Clear photos and a few scope notes usually make the first answer faster and more useful. If a repair is enough, Brandon will say so. If it needs full strip-out or more project detail, he will say that too.

  • Photos of the joint or penetration area
  • Plans, marked-up locations, or defect notices
  • Known wall/floor assembly or system requirement
  • Access and tenancy notes
  • Documentation or handover expectations
  • Suburb and timing

Owner-operated caulking and joint sealing across Brisbane North, Moreton Bay, and wider SEQ on request.

Fire-rated sealingProperty managersCommercial scope