steel Fire doors help reduce the spread of fire and smoke in a home or building. Both commercial and residential structures can use fire-rated doors.
steel Fire door materials and parts
steel Fire doors consist of materials: steel. Both the slab and the door frame must meet requirements to earn a fire-rating. The door frame parts include seals, hardware and the structure. On an even more granular level here is a breakdown of elements:
Seals
An intumescent strip, which expands when exposed to heat
Gaskets to prevent the passage of smoke
Neoprene weatherstripping
Door hardware
Automatic closing devices or objects
Ball-bearing hinges
Gas seals
Positive latching mechanisms
Smoke seals
Standards for fire-rated doors
If a window is present,it must have a rating as well. Fire-rated glass may contain wire mesh glass, liquid sodium silicate, ceramic glass or borosilicate glass. Wired glass typically withstands the fire. The sodium silicate liquid acts to insulate heat transfer.
The National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) 80 standard regulates the installation and maintenance of assemblies and devices used to protect openings in walls, floors and ceilings against the spread of fire and smoke. The International Building Code (IBC) and International Fire Code (IFC) reference the NFPA 80 standard.
NFPA 80 5.2.4. requires the following items be verified, at minimum:
No open holes or breaks exist in surfaces of either the door or frame
Glazing, vision light frames and glazing beads are intact and securely fastened in place, if applicable
The door, frame, hinges, hardware and noncombustible threshold are secured, aligned and in working order with no visible signs of damage
No parts are missing or broken
Door clearances at the door edge of the door frame (wood door), on the pull side of the door, do not exceed clearances listed in 4.8.4 (the clearance under the bottom of the door, maximum of 3/4″) and 6.3.1 (top and edges, 1/8″); or for metal doors (top and edges, up to 3/16″)
Self-closing device is operational
Coordinators, if installed, close the inactive leaf before the active leaf
Latching hardware operates and secures the door when in the closed position
Auxiliary hardware items that interfere with or restrict operation are not installed on the door or frame
No field modifications to the door assembly have been performed that void the label
Gasketing and edge seals, where required, are inspected to verify their presence and integrity
Fire-resistance ratings
The fire-resistance rating is the duration for which a passive fire protection system can withstand a fire-resistance test. It is most often a measurement of time. Fire ratings can be 20, 45, 60, 90 or 180 minutes. A third-party agency tests doors to ensure they meet the requirements.
Standards and testing
Testing of fire-rated doors is via Underwriters Laboratory (UL) standards and NFPA standards:
UL 10B, Fire Tests of Door Assemblies (neutral or negative pressure)
UL 10C, Positive Fire Pressure Tests of Door Assemblies
NFPA 252, Standard Methods of Fire Tests of Door Assemblies
WHI
FM
Testing of doors uses heat up to 1925 degrees Fahrenheit. If the door remains in the frame with no through openings and limits flames, it’s certified with an endurance rating of the appropriate minutes.
After the fire endurance test, the test specimen undergoes the hose stream test. The test consists of a fire hose delivering water at 30 psi from 20′ away. Building codes throughout the U.S. typically stipulate that 20-minute doors are exempt from the hose stream test.
JELD-WEN fire-rated doors
We offer fire-rated doors for interior and exterior usage. The
highest-rated exterior doors we offer 180-minute.
You can view the complete listing of our fire-rated doors here.







