A court battle between japanese wired glass manufacturers and cpsc ensued and the commission was forced to abandon its efforts to regulate the product.
Sf law on wire glass doors.
Title 24 part 2 section 2 3303 b 2 c.
2 windows if used shall be kept free of dirt or other obstruction to vision.
Limitations on the use of traditional wired glass as of the 2006 ibc traditional wired glass is prohibited in hazardous locations in all building types.
Inches in door vision panels in 60 90 minute exit enclosure and passageway doors provided that building was fully sprinklered.
Wired glass is not prohibited in fire rated doors or non fire rated doors.
Exposed glass edges shall be smooth.
However traditional wired glass no longer enjoys the exception that was previously allowed by building codes and 16 cfr 1201 because traditional wired glass was at the time the only fire rated glazing available but could not pass the more stringent impact requirements of 16 cfr 1201.
Before the 2012 ibc the code provided for an exception that allowed fire protective glazing such as ceramics and wired glass to exceed 100 sq.
Safety wired glass products are tested to and meet the highest safety requirements mandated by both the code and the federal government s consumer products safety commission cpsc and have attained a fire rating after stringent fire testing.
Building codes for exterior doors.
That exemption no longer applies.
Float wired and pat ternedglassinlouveredwindowsandjalousiesshallbenothin ner than nominal 3 16 inch 4 8 mm and no longer than 48 inches 1219 mm.
The codes exempted traditional wired glass where fire rated glazing was needed.
Exterior doors in homes and businesses not only provide security but they also serve as a vital means of egress during a fire or other emergency.
Fire rated glazing in hazardous locations including doors sidelites windows near the floor and other areas at risk for impact must also meet impact safety testing standards.
Safety wired glass although it looks like traditional wired incorporates a safety film and meets both fire and consumer product safety commission impact safety requirements.
One shall be provided for each door of swinging double doors.
In 1977 a 2 5 year exemption was granted for wired glass in fire door assemblies to give the glass industry time to develop glazing that met both fire and impact requirements.
It is suitable for use in any door sidelite or other hazardous location where safety is a concern as outlined in chapter 24 of the international building code.
Wired glass with wire exposed on longitudinal edges shall not be used in louvered windows or jalousies.