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FAQ's: What are the typical lead times for EMSEAL's precompressed foam products? What are the typical lead times for EMSEAL's parking deck, plaza deck, stadium, and floor products? Will liquid sealant primers affect BACKERSEAL? Does BACKERSEAL contain any wax in its formulation. Your materials are certified to be “stable” at 185 degrees F. What do you mean by “stable”? Why not use closed-cell foam as backing instead of impregnated foam? Why does EMSEAL discourage the use of gutters under deck expansion joints? Are your deck joints ADA compliant? Does EMSEAL provide job specific shop drawings based on field conditions? On your interior floor expansion joint index, what do Standard / Medium / Heavy relate to? Does your DSM SYSTEM support high heel foot traffic? What is the coefficient of friction on the SJS SYSTEM Coverplates? Does EMSEAL Private Label its Architectural Precompressed Sealant Products to Anyone? |
Frequently Asked Questions:
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| Closed-cell-backed hybrid shown at supplied size of
2-1/2" (65mm) for compression into a 2" (50mm) joint opening. |
Permanent loss to compression set of 25% of the movement capability of the product after just one cycle to the published minimum joint size and simultaneously heated to a substrate temperature that will cause that movement. |
Q: Why does EMSEAL discourage the use of gutters under deck expansion joints?
A: There are several reasons not to use gutters under joint systems:
1) The gutter conceals any leaks. The leaks go undetected. The structure corrodes. Once water (carrying salts and other corrosion causing chemicals) has bypassed the primary joint system, costly and dangerous degradation of the structure begins. This is because water runs over the concrete on its way to the gutter. During this passage it will make its way to the rebar. The rebar will corrode, expand, and spall the concrete.
2) Gutters are not water proofing, they are water management. Water that reaches a gutter must be managed to drains. To do this gutters must be pitched to ensure drainage. The gutters must be dammed at ends and be fabricated to be watertight at plane and direction changes. Joint systems are too often detailed in cross-section only. In cross-section a gutter looks effective. Joints detailed in cross-section will not get constructed either with pitch or with terminations, transitions, or integration into the drainage systems.
It is when the gutter is considered in 3-D that the challenges of water management are revealed. (More on 3-D joint design).
3) A joint system that incorporates a gutter as standard equipment or a joint design that incorporates a gutter beneath another joint system is by default admission that the joint system is not watertight. The choice of that joint system should be reconsidered.
4) Gutters, or gutters incorporated into joint systems, provide a highway for vermin. It is not unusual, particularly in sports venues like stadiums to find evidence of active communities of rats and other vermin using gutters as their homes and/or transportation infrastructure around the building. Joint systems that are not watertight at the surface allow liquids (beer, soda pop) and washing-water-diluted foods to enter the gutter system. Vermin take advantage of this food source.
5) Again, gutters conceal leaks. EMSEAL supplies joint systems that are watertight. These systems when properly detailed using axonometric CAD details for watertight treatment at terminations and transitions, and when installed according to EMSEAL's instructions, can be expected to be watertight.
If a system leaks, we want immediate, early detection of the leak. This will allow the cause of the leak to be identified and remedied. Gutters can seriously compound the difficulty of tracing the source of the leak to a particular location.
If gutters are used, however, it is critical to ensure that:
a) continuity of seal in the gutter material is assured at splices,
terminations, and transitions in plane and direction,
b) that regular inspection of contents of the gutters is prescribed as a
routine maintenance procedure,
c) that sufficient slope is engineered and constructed into the gutter
to facilitate drainage,
d) that water collected in gutters is managed to drains or other exit
points where runoff does not facilitate deterioration of structural
components or finishes,
e) that the gutter is not concealing deterioration of structural
elements above.
Q: Are your deck joints ADA compliant?
A: Yes.
(For more information see tech bulletin).
Q: Does EMSEAL provide job specific shop drawings based on field conditions? (received via techinfo@emseal.com)
A: Yes.
EMSEAL routinely works with contractors preparing to install our materials to produce shop drawings based on job specific, existing conditions communicated to EMSEAL by the contractor.
Field sketches, measurements, digital photographs and modified construction details, combined with information gathered using our checklists as a guideline, form the basis of the information communicated to us for use in the production of shop drawings.
The extent of the shop drawings depends also on the product, application, and complexity of the field conditions but as a rule, as long as all the parties involved in the project are willing to work together to problem solve within their area of responsibility, there are seldom conditions that cannot be properly addressed.
Our local representatives and distributors are at your service as are our on-staff technical team. This link will give you representative and distributor contact information and the EMSEAL technical team can be reached at techinfo@emseal.com, toll free at 800-526-8365 or by calling 508-836-0280.
Q: On your interior floor expansion joint index, what do Standard / Medium / Heavy relate to?
A: Standard / Medium / and Heavy as they relate to load ratings are provided as a subjective guideline in making a preliminary narrowing of product selection for a given application.
”Standard” is meant to suggest for use in light duty uses such as typical office or other spaces where pedestrian traffic or occasional rubber-wheeled traffic like mail carts and light-weight cleaning equipment, luggage, etc. is the normal traffic. The systems in this category are usually comprised of extruded aluminum rails, either surface or blockout-mounted, into which a light duty elastomeric insert is installed.
“Medium” suggests applications where occasional heavier maintenance equipment (scissor lifts, motorized cleaning equipment etc.) would be added to the standard traffic. The systems in this category are comprised of slightly heavier aluminum extrusions, for either surface or blockout mounting, with heavier extruded rubber inserts, or of lightweight all-aluminum construction.
“Heavy” is for applications where truly heavy loads (forklifts and other vehicles), or high-point load vehicles (gurneys, mobile medical equipment, coin carts, materials handling equipment, etc.) are the norm. These systems are heavy-duty, all-aluminum extrusions of extraordinary quality and fit. They are capable of multi-directional movements and are also available in surface or blockout mounted variations.
In these cases, since the actual loads and pressures the joint system feels are directly related to the type of wheels, combined with the gross weight of the vehicle, we provide detailed loading information as can be seen on the product page for the FS 110 system.
We are working to provide the information in the format seen on the FS 110 page for all our heavy duty profiles but are not quite there yet. If there is a model that appears more suitable to your application that does not have enough information we would be pleased to assist in comparing a particular vehicle load to any of our systems. This Interior Floor Expansion Joint Checklist is a handy way of communicating your needs to us.
Q: Does your DSM SYSTEM support high heel foot traffic?
A: While the DSM SYSTEM is likely to be more durable than alternatives under foot traffic including contact with incidental high heel point loads, we cannot provide assurance that it will be any better in preventing all possible mishaps resulting from a wearer’s failure to take responsibility of their choice of wardrobe and its suitability in traversing joints and other surfaces typical of normal walking surfaces. (see also ADA and Spiked Heel tech bulletin).
Q: What is the coefficient of friction on the SJS SYSTEM Coverplates?
A:
Dry SCOF: 1.176
Wet SCOF: 0.936
The ADA recommends that horizontal surfaces have a SCOF (Static Coefficient of Friction) of at least 0.6. Consequently, the SJS coverplate passes the recommendation both the wet and dry.
Tests were conducted according to ASTM C-1028 by an independent testing lab, AMT Laboratories, on stainless-steel coverplates with a standard sand-blasted finish. The same finish is supplied on our aluminum coverplates and the values are therefore expected to be the same.
(For a pdf of the test report CLICK HERE)
Q: Does the EMSHIELD DFR2 require a sealant band injected from the underside along the in tumescent bellows-to-substrate interface?
A: NO
The EMSHIELD DFR2, fire rated, watertight, traffic durable, expansion joint system was deliberately tested to UL 2079 without intumescent-sealant injected at the bondline from the underside. The system passed UL 2079 with no problem in this configuration. The goal of the DFR2 project was to produce a fire rated expansion joint that could be installed entirely from the top side of a deck without the need to access the bottom side. This goal was achieved.
Q: Does EMSEAL Private Label its Architectural Precompressed Sealants to Anyone?
A: No.
This is among the MOST frequently asked questions of EMSEAL. One of our sales team was recently in a customer’s office. This contractor had recently bought some “COLORSEAL” from a competitor of EMSEAL’s because the rep told them that EMSEAL, “made their stuff anyway so you might as well just buy it from us.”
To the best of our knowledge, there is one other manufacturer, Schul, that makes their own brand but also private labels look alike products to as many as, at last count, NINE other “manufacturers” including: Lymtal; Watson Bowman; C/S; MM Systems; Sandell; Balco; Polytite (Dayton Superior); Inpro; and Erie Metals… (now technically there might be some two-stepping going on between some of these players but the ultimate source of manufacture is still the same).
To be clear:
--If it doesn’t say “EMSEAL” on the box, and the packaging, and the supporting documentation—IT’s NOT EMSEAL.
--If it doesn’t have an EMSEAL product brand name on it—IT’s NOT EMSEAL.
--If the “manufacturer” cannot certify with independent lab FTIR and DSC analysis (ask us for ours) that the impregnation in the foam is 100% acrylic—IT’s NOT EMSEAL.
--If the sticks are 5-feet long and not 6.56-feet (2 meters)—IT’s NOT EMSEAL.
EMSEAL does NOT private label its architectural precompressed sealants to ANYONE. PERIOD. And that applies to all our brands—BACKERSEAL, COLORSEAL, SEISMIC COLORSEAL, DSM SYSTEM, EMSHIELD, SecuritySeal, SEISMIC-COLORSEAL DS, SJS SYSTEM, DSF SYSTEM, etc.
The FAQ section of emseal.com is continually being updated and is derived from questions asked through consultations with owners, architects, engineers, contractors, distributors and manufacturer's representatives by phone as well as received through techinfo@emseal.com.
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