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What is a Flame Retardant Cable?

2026-06-07
1. The Direct Answer: Self-Extinguishing, Not Fire-Proof

People always ask: "What is a flame retardant cable?"

The simple answer: A flame retardant cable is designed to self-extinguish when the ignition source is removed — preventing the fire from spreading along the cable run. It is not fire-proof (it will burn while the flame is present), but it will not continue to burn once the flame is taken away.

Key Distinction:
Cable Type Behavior During Fire Behavior After Fire Source Removed Primary Goal
Standard (non-FR) cable Burns readily, drips flaming material Continues burning (flame propagates) Lowest cost
Flame Retardant (FR) cable Burns while flame present; limited flame spread Self-extinguishes within seconds Prevent fire spread along cable pathways
Fire Resistant (FRR / CI) cable Continues to function (circuit integrity maintained) Maintains electrical function for specified time (30-180 min) Keep critical circuits operational during fire

The Bottom Line: Flame retardant cables save lives and protect property by containing fire to the point of origin rather than allowing it to travel through cable trays, conduits, and vertical shafts.

latest company news about What is a Flame Retardant Cable?  0

(Flame Retardant Cable: Self-extinguishes when flame source removed — stops fire spread)

At Dingzun Cable, we manufacture flame retardant cables certified to international standards (IEC 60332-1, VW-1, IEC 60332-3) — ensuring your installation meets fire safety codes and protects personnel and equipment.

2. Why “Single” vs. “Bundled” Testing Matters

A single cable burning in open air behaves very differently from a tightly packed bundle of cables in a tray or vertical shaft.

Table 1: Single vs. Bundled Flame Test — Critical Differences

Factor Single Cable Test (IEC 60332-1 / VW-1) Bundled Cable Test (IEC 60332-3 / UL 1685 / UL 1666)
Installation scenario simulated Isolated cable in conduit or clipped to wall Dense cable tray, vertical riser, tunnel, plenum
Flame energy Low (single flame source) High (multiple cables ignite each other)
Heat feedback None (cable burns in open air) Significant — cables heat neighboring cables
Flame spread speed Slow (limited by single cable) Fast — flame jumps between cables
Risk of fire propagation Low to moderate High — can become “fire highway”
Test pass requirement Self-extinguish within 60s; limited burn length Flame spread limited to specified distance (e.g., 2.5m for IEC A); often includes smoke/toxicity for plenum

The Critical Principle:

“Single cable flame retardancy is necessary but NOT sufficient for bundled installations.”

Why Bundle Fire is Worse:

Physical Effect Explanation
Mutual heating Each burning cable heats its neighbors, reducing the heat needed for ignition
Flame bridging Flames can jump directly between cables, bypassing self-extinguishing mechanisms
Fuel load density A cable tray may contain 1-7 liters of non-metallic material per meter (IEC A = 7 L/m)
Vertical propagation In risers, flames pre-heat cables above, accelerating upward spread

At Dingzun Cable, our engineering team helps you determine whether your installation requires single or bundled flame retardant ratings based on cable density, location, and local electrical codes.

3. IEC Standards: Single & Bundled Flame Tests (60332-1 vs 60332-3)

The IEC 60332 series is the international standard for flame retardancy testing.

latest company news about What is a Flame Retardant Cable?  1

(Flame retardant rating levels (IEC 60332))

Table 2: IEC 60332 Flame Test Standards

Standard Test Type Sample Flame Application Pass Criteria Typical Use
IEC 60332-1-2 Single vertical cable 600mm single cable 60-480 sec (depending on diameter) Charring distance ≥50mm from top clamp Basic entry-level requirement for all cables
IEC 60332-3-22 Bundled (Class A) 3.5m cable bundle, 7 L/m non-metallic volume 40 minutes, 750°C Flame spread <2.5m Most severe — tunnels, metros, data centers, offshore
IEC 60332-3-23 Bundled (Class B) 3.5m bundle, 3.5 L/m non-metallic volume 40 minutes, 750°C Flame spread <2.5m Medium-high density industrial trays
IEC 60332-3-24 Bundled (Class C) 3.5m bundle, 1.5 L/m non-metallic volume 20 minutes, 750°C Flame spread <2.5m General industrial cable trays
IEC 60332-3-25 Bundled (Class D) 3.5m bundle, 0.5 L/m non-metallic volume (small cables ≤12mm OD) 20 minutes, 750°C Flame spread <2.5m Small-diameter cables in bundles

What the “L/m” (Liters per meter) Means:

Class Non-Metallic Volume Equivalent Cable Density Severity
Class A 7 L/m Very dense tray (many large cables) Highest
Class B 3.5 L/m Dense tray (mixed sizes) High
Class C 1.5 L/m Moderate density Medium
Class D 0.5 L/m Light density (small cables only) Low-medium

At Dingzun Cable, our engineering team helps you determine whether your installation requires single or bundled flame retardant ratings based on cable density, location, and local electrical codes.

4. UL/CSA Standards: From CMX (Single) to CMP (Plenum)

The UL/CSA system uses a different hierarchy, with distinct tests for single cables, risers, and plenums.

Table 3: UL/CSA Flame Retardant Ratings — Complete Hierarchy

Rating Test Method Installation Allowed Key Requirement Smoke Limit?
CMX / VW-1 UL 1581 VW-1 Single cables only — NOT for bundles Self-extinguish No
CMH / FT1 CSA FT1 (single) Single cables only — NOT for bundles Self-extinguish No
CM UL 1685 Method 1 (Vertical Tray) Horizontal bundles, same floor only Flame spread limited No
CMG / FT4 UL 1685 Method 2 (CSA FT4) Horizontal bundles, Canadian market More stringent than CM No
CMR (Riser) UL 1666 (7.3m vertical shaft) Vertical risers, multi-floor Flame spread <3.66m (no floor-to-floor spread) No
CMP (Plenum) UL 910 / NFPA 262 (Steiner Tunnel, 7.62m horizontal) Air handling spaces (plenums, ducts, drop ceilings) Flame spread <1.52m; smoke density limited Yes (peak <0.5)

Important Distinctions:

Rating Also Known As Single/Bundled Use Case
CMX/CMH VW-1, FT1 Single only Home, small office (requires conduit in many cases)
CM UL 1685 Method 1 Bundled (light) Same-floor horizontal runs in commercial buildings
CMG/FT4 UL 1685 Method 2 Bundled (medium) Canadian market horizontal bundles
CMR Riser, UL 1666 Bundled (vertical) Vertical shafts, multi-floor risers
CMP Plenum, FT6, Steiner Tunnel Bundled (horizontal + smoke) Air handling spaces (no conduit required)

At Dingzun Cable, we manufacture flame retardant cables to all UL/CSA ratings — from CMX/VW-1 for single cables to CMR (riser) and CMP (plenum) for demanding building installations. We help you match the rating to your local electrical code (NEC/CSA) and installation environment.

5. Complete Flame Retardant Rating Pyramid (Most to Least Severe)

Visualizing the hierarchy helps select the correct rating for your application.

Table 4: Flame Retardant Severity Pyramid — IEC vs UL/CSA

Severity Level IEC Standard UL/CSA Standard Typical Application
Highest (Plenum) CMP (UL 910 / NFPA 262) Air handling spaces, drop ceilings, ducts — flame + smoke
Very High (Riser) CMR (UL 1666) Vertical multi-floor risers — no floor-to-floor spread
High (Bundled, Severe) IEC 60332-3-22 (Class A) — 7 L/m Tunnels, metros, data center trunks
High (Bundled, Medium) IEC 60332-3-23 (Class B) — 3.5 L/m CMG/FT4 (UL 1685 Method 2) Dense industrial trays, Canadian market
Medium (Bundled, Light) IEC 60332-3-24 (Class C) — 1.5 L/m CM (UL 1685 Method 1) General horizontal trays, US commercial
Low (Bundled, Small Cable) IEC 60332-3-25 (Class D) — 0.5 L/m Small-diameter cables (≤12mm) in bundles
Lowest (Single Cable) IEC 60332-1-2 CMX (VW-1), CMH (FT1) Single cables, home/office (requires conduit in many cases)

Key Takeaway: *“CMP is the highest (plenum, flame + smoke), IEC Class A is the most severe bundled (tunnels), VW-1 is the lowest (single cable). Always check your local code: NEC requires CMR/CMP for risers/plenums; IEC countries require Class A/B/C/D for bundled industrial trays.”*

At Dingzun Cable, our engineering team helps you identify the correct severity level based on your installation type (single cable, horizontal tray, vertical riser, plenum, tunnel) and target market (IEC vs UL/CSA).

6. Specialized Tests: Riser (UL 1666) and Plenum (UL 910)

These tests simulate the most demanding real-world fire scenarios.

Why Plenum (CMP) is the Most Stringent:

Hazard Mitigation
Flame spread Limited to 1.52m (vs 3.66m for riser)
Smoke density Limited — occupants must see to evacuate
Toxicity Not directly measured but LSZH materials common
Air movement HVAC can spread smoke; test includes forced airflow

At Dingzun Cable, we offer CMR (riser) and CMP (plenum) rated cables for building installations requiring the highest flame retardancy levels per NEC. We also offer LSZH compounds for applications requiring low smoke and zero halogens.

7. How to Select the Right Flame Retardant Rating

Use this decision framework based on your installation type and market.

Table 6: Flame Retardant Selection by Application

Installation Scenario Typical Cable Density Recommended Rating (IEC) Recommended Rating (UL/CSA)
Single cable in conduit (home/office) N/A (single) IEC 60332-1-2 CMX (VW-1) or CMH
Horizontal tray, low density <1.0 L/m IEC 60332-3-25 (Class D) CM (UL 1685 Method 1)
Horizontal tray, moderate density 1.5-3.5 L/m IEC 60332-3-24 (Class C) CM or CMG/FT4 (Canada)
Horizontal tray, high density >3.5 L/m IEC 60332-3-23 (Class B) CMG/FT4
Vertical riser (multi-floor) Variable Not typical (IEC countries use building codes) CMR (UL 1666) — mandatory
Air plenum (drop ceiling, duct) Variable Not typical (IEC countries use LSZH often) CMP (UL 910) — mandatory
Tunnel, metro, data center trunk Very high (7 L/m+) IEC 60332-3-22 (Class A) N/A (use IEC or custom spec)
Ship, offshore platform High IEC 60332-3 (Class B/C) + LSZH IEEE 1580 (often references IEC)

Decision Flowchart:

Question Yes → No →
Is cable in an air handling plenum (drop ceiling/duct)? CMP required (UL 910) Continue
Is cable in a vertical riser (multi-floor)? CMR required (UL 1666) Continue
Is cable in a tunnel, metro, or high-density tray (>3 L/m)? IEC 60332-3 Class A/B Continue
Is cable in a horizontal tray (moderate density)? IEC Class C or CM Continue
Is cable single and in conduit? VW-1 or IEC 60332-1 Continue

At Dingzun Cable, we offer a free application review to help you select the correct flame retardant rating per NEC, CEC, or IEC codes. Our technical team will review your cable tray density, vertical runs, and local requirements.

8. Key Takeaways for Engineers and Specifiers

Takeaway Implication
Single test ≠ Bundle safety Never assume a VW-1 or IEC 60332-1 cable is safe for a crowded tray or riser
Know your fuel load (L/m) Estimate non-metallic volume per meter; higher density requires higher class (A/B/C)
Plenum is the most stringent (CMP) CMP limits both flame and smoke; required for air handling spaces
Riser prevents floor-to-floor spread (CMR) Required for vertical shafts; flame spread limited to <3.66m
IEC classes A–D match density Class A (7 L/m) for tunnels; Class C (1.5 L/m) for general trays
UL/CSA uses different hierarchy CMX (single) → CM (horizontal) → CMR (riser) → CMP (plenum)
Canadian market often requires FT4/CMG More stringent than US CM for horizontal bundles
Always check local code NEC (US), CEC (Canada), or local IEC-based code dictates minimum rating

At Dingzun Cable, our engineering team stays current on international flame retardant standards. We provide cables with certified test reports — not just "claims" — to support your regulatory compliance and fire safety objectives.

With 20+ years of specialized manufacturing experience, Dingzun Cable is a trusted partner for global industrial facilities, engineering firms, and electrical contractors requiring high-quality flame retardant cables for fire-safe installations. We combine deep materials expertise with extreme customizability to deliver cables that meet your specific fire safety requirements.

latest company news about What is a Flame Retardant Cable?  2

(Dingzun Cable flame retardant cables)

Our Flame Retardant Cable Capabilities:

Capability Dingzun Specification
IEC Standards IEC 60332-1-2 (single), IEC 60332-3-22/23/24/25 (Class A/B/C/D)
UL/CSA Standards VW-1 (CMX), FT1 (CMH), CM (UL 1685 Method 1), FT4/CMG (Method 2), CMR (UL 1666 Riser) , CMP (UL 910 Plenum)
LSZH (Low Smoke Zero Halogen) IEC 61034 (low smoke), IEC 60754 (zero halogen), with flame retardancy
Materials FR-PVC, LSZH, XLPE (flame retardant grades)
Temperature Ratings 70°C to 105°C (PVC/LSZH); 125°C (XLPE)
Conductor Options Bare copper (CU), Tinned (TC)
Shielding Foil, braid, composite (as required)
Certifications ISO 9001:2015, UL, CE, RoHS, REACH
Testing 100% electrical testing; periodic flame testing per standard

Why Dingzun Cable for Your Flame Retardant Cable Needs:

  • Certified flame ratings — Independent test documentation for all FR levels (single to plenum)
  • Complete standard coverage — IEC 60332, UL 1581, UL 1666, UL 910, CSA FT4 — all in-house
  • Expert engineering team — Free consultation on flame rating selection per NEC/CEC/IEC codes
  • Extreme customizability — Length, conductor count, gauge, shielding, jacket color — fully tailored
  • Direct professional communication — Fast quotes, technical datasheets, test reports
  • Global shipping — UL for North America, IEC for international, LSZH for fire-critical applications

Need a flame retardant cable certified for your specific fire safety requirement?

[Contact our technical team today for a free consultation and custom quote].

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Company news about-What is a Flame Retardant Cable?

What is a Flame Retardant Cable?

2026-06-07
1. The Direct Answer: Self-Extinguishing, Not Fire-Proof

People always ask: "What is a flame retardant cable?"

The simple answer: A flame retardant cable is designed to self-extinguish when the ignition source is removed — preventing the fire from spreading along the cable run. It is not fire-proof (it will burn while the flame is present), but it will not continue to burn once the flame is taken away.

Key Distinction:
Cable Type Behavior During Fire Behavior After Fire Source Removed Primary Goal
Standard (non-FR) cable Burns readily, drips flaming material Continues burning (flame propagates) Lowest cost
Flame Retardant (FR) cable Burns while flame present; limited flame spread Self-extinguishes within seconds Prevent fire spread along cable pathways
Fire Resistant (FRR / CI) cable Continues to function (circuit integrity maintained) Maintains electrical function for specified time (30-180 min) Keep critical circuits operational during fire

The Bottom Line: Flame retardant cables save lives and protect property by containing fire to the point of origin rather than allowing it to travel through cable trays, conduits, and vertical shafts.

latest company news about What is a Flame Retardant Cable?  0

(Flame Retardant Cable: Self-extinguishes when flame source removed — stops fire spread)

At Dingzun Cable, we manufacture flame retardant cables certified to international standards (IEC 60332-1, VW-1, IEC 60332-3) — ensuring your installation meets fire safety codes and protects personnel and equipment.

2. Why “Single” vs. “Bundled” Testing Matters

A single cable burning in open air behaves very differently from a tightly packed bundle of cables in a tray or vertical shaft.

Table 1: Single vs. Bundled Flame Test — Critical Differences

Factor Single Cable Test (IEC 60332-1 / VW-1) Bundled Cable Test (IEC 60332-3 / UL 1685 / UL 1666)
Installation scenario simulated Isolated cable in conduit or clipped to wall Dense cable tray, vertical riser, tunnel, plenum
Flame energy Low (single flame source) High (multiple cables ignite each other)
Heat feedback None (cable burns in open air) Significant — cables heat neighboring cables
Flame spread speed Slow (limited by single cable) Fast — flame jumps between cables
Risk of fire propagation Low to moderate High — can become “fire highway”
Test pass requirement Self-extinguish within 60s; limited burn length Flame spread limited to specified distance (e.g., 2.5m for IEC A); often includes smoke/toxicity for plenum

The Critical Principle:

“Single cable flame retardancy is necessary but NOT sufficient for bundled installations.”

Why Bundle Fire is Worse:

Physical Effect Explanation
Mutual heating Each burning cable heats its neighbors, reducing the heat needed for ignition
Flame bridging Flames can jump directly between cables, bypassing self-extinguishing mechanisms
Fuel load density A cable tray may contain 1-7 liters of non-metallic material per meter (IEC A = 7 L/m)
Vertical propagation In risers, flames pre-heat cables above, accelerating upward spread

At Dingzun Cable, our engineering team helps you determine whether your installation requires single or bundled flame retardant ratings based on cable density, location, and local electrical codes.

3. IEC Standards: Single & Bundled Flame Tests (60332-1 vs 60332-3)

The IEC 60332 series is the international standard for flame retardancy testing.

latest company news about What is a Flame Retardant Cable?  1

(Flame retardant rating levels (IEC 60332))

Table 2: IEC 60332 Flame Test Standards

Standard Test Type Sample Flame Application Pass Criteria Typical Use
IEC 60332-1-2 Single vertical cable 600mm single cable 60-480 sec (depending on diameter) Charring distance ≥50mm from top clamp Basic entry-level requirement for all cables
IEC 60332-3-22 Bundled (Class A) 3.5m cable bundle, 7 L/m non-metallic volume 40 minutes, 750°C Flame spread <2.5m Most severe — tunnels, metros, data centers, offshore
IEC 60332-3-23 Bundled (Class B) 3.5m bundle, 3.5 L/m non-metallic volume 40 minutes, 750°C Flame spread <2.5m Medium-high density industrial trays
IEC 60332-3-24 Bundled (Class C) 3.5m bundle, 1.5 L/m non-metallic volume 20 minutes, 750°C Flame spread <2.5m General industrial cable trays
IEC 60332-3-25 Bundled (Class D) 3.5m bundle, 0.5 L/m non-metallic volume (small cables ≤12mm OD) 20 minutes, 750°C Flame spread <2.5m Small-diameter cables in bundles

What the “L/m” (Liters per meter) Means:

Class Non-Metallic Volume Equivalent Cable Density Severity
Class A 7 L/m Very dense tray (many large cables) Highest
Class B 3.5 L/m Dense tray (mixed sizes) High
Class C 1.5 L/m Moderate density Medium
Class D 0.5 L/m Light density (small cables only) Low-medium

At Dingzun Cable, our engineering team helps you determine whether your installation requires single or bundled flame retardant ratings based on cable density, location, and local electrical codes.

4. UL/CSA Standards: From CMX (Single) to CMP (Plenum)

The UL/CSA system uses a different hierarchy, with distinct tests for single cables, risers, and plenums.

Table 3: UL/CSA Flame Retardant Ratings — Complete Hierarchy

Rating Test Method Installation Allowed Key Requirement Smoke Limit?
CMX / VW-1 UL 1581 VW-1 Single cables only — NOT for bundles Self-extinguish No
CMH / FT1 CSA FT1 (single) Single cables only — NOT for bundles Self-extinguish No
CM UL 1685 Method 1 (Vertical Tray) Horizontal bundles, same floor only Flame spread limited No
CMG / FT4 UL 1685 Method 2 (CSA FT4) Horizontal bundles, Canadian market More stringent than CM No
CMR (Riser) UL 1666 (7.3m vertical shaft) Vertical risers, multi-floor Flame spread <3.66m (no floor-to-floor spread) No
CMP (Plenum) UL 910 / NFPA 262 (Steiner Tunnel, 7.62m horizontal) Air handling spaces (plenums, ducts, drop ceilings) Flame spread <1.52m; smoke density limited Yes (peak <0.5)

Important Distinctions:

Rating Also Known As Single/Bundled Use Case
CMX/CMH VW-1, FT1 Single only Home, small office (requires conduit in many cases)
CM UL 1685 Method 1 Bundled (light) Same-floor horizontal runs in commercial buildings
CMG/FT4 UL 1685 Method 2 Bundled (medium) Canadian market horizontal bundles
CMR Riser, UL 1666 Bundled (vertical) Vertical shafts, multi-floor risers
CMP Plenum, FT6, Steiner Tunnel Bundled (horizontal + smoke) Air handling spaces (no conduit required)

At Dingzun Cable, we manufacture flame retardant cables to all UL/CSA ratings — from CMX/VW-1 for single cables to CMR (riser) and CMP (plenum) for demanding building installations. We help you match the rating to your local electrical code (NEC/CSA) and installation environment.

5. Complete Flame Retardant Rating Pyramid (Most to Least Severe)

Visualizing the hierarchy helps select the correct rating for your application.

Table 4: Flame Retardant Severity Pyramid — IEC vs UL/CSA

Severity Level IEC Standard UL/CSA Standard Typical Application
Highest (Plenum) CMP (UL 910 / NFPA 262) Air handling spaces, drop ceilings, ducts — flame + smoke
Very High (Riser) CMR (UL 1666) Vertical multi-floor risers — no floor-to-floor spread
High (Bundled, Severe) IEC 60332-3-22 (Class A) — 7 L/m Tunnels, metros, data center trunks
High (Bundled, Medium) IEC 60332-3-23 (Class B) — 3.5 L/m CMG/FT4 (UL 1685 Method 2) Dense industrial trays, Canadian market
Medium (Bundled, Light) IEC 60332-3-24 (Class C) — 1.5 L/m CM (UL 1685 Method 1) General horizontal trays, US commercial
Low (Bundled, Small Cable) IEC 60332-3-25 (Class D) — 0.5 L/m Small-diameter cables (≤12mm) in bundles
Lowest (Single Cable) IEC 60332-1-2 CMX (VW-1), CMH (FT1) Single cables, home/office (requires conduit in many cases)

Key Takeaway: *“CMP is the highest (plenum, flame + smoke), IEC Class A is the most severe bundled (tunnels), VW-1 is the lowest (single cable). Always check your local code: NEC requires CMR/CMP for risers/plenums; IEC countries require Class A/B/C/D for bundled industrial trays.”*

At Dingzun Cable, our engineering team helps you identify the correct severity level based on your installation type (single cable, horizontal tray, vertical riser, plenum, tunnel) and target market (IEC vs UL/CSA).

6. Specialized Tests: Riser (UL 1666) and Plenum (UL 910)

These tests simulate the most demanding real-world fire scenarios.

Why Plenum (CMP) is the Most Stringent:

Hazard Mitigation
Flame spread Limited to 1.52m (vs 3.66m for riser)
Smoke density Limited — occupants must see to evacuate
Toxicity Not directly measured but LSZH materials common
Air movement HVAC can spread smoke; test includes forced airflow

At Dingzun Cable, we offer CMR (riser) and CMP (plenum) rated cables for building installations requiring the highest flame retardancy levels per NEC. We also offer LSZH compounds for applications requiring low smoke and zero halogens.

7. How to Select the Right Flame Retardant Rating

Use this decision framework based on your installation type and market.

Table 6: Flame Retardant Selection by Application

Installation Scenario Typical Cable Density Recommended Rating (IEC) Recommended Rating (UL/CSA)
Single cable in conduit (home/office) N/A (single) IEC 60332-1-2 CMX (VW-1) or CMH
Horizontal tray, low density <1.0 L/m IEC 60332-3-25 (Class D) CM (UL 1685 Method 1)
Horizontal tray, moderate density 1.5-3.5 L/m IEC 60332-3-24 (Class C) CM or CMG/FT4 (Canada)
Horizontal tray, high density >3.5 L/m IEC 60332-3-23 (Class B) CMG/FT4
Vertical riser (multi-floor) Variable Not typical (IEC countries use building codes) CMR (UL 1666) — mandatory
Air plenum (drop ceiling, duct) Variable Not typical (IEC countries use LSZH often) CMP (UL 910) — mandatory
Tunnel, metro, data center trunk Very high (7 L/m+) IEC 60332-3-22 (Class A) N/A (use IEC or custom spec)
Ship, offshore platform High IEC 60332-3 (Class B/C) + LSZH IEEE 1580 (often references IEC)

Decision Flowchart:

Question Yes → No →
Is cable in an air handling plenum (drop ceiling/duct)? CMP required (UL 910) Continue
Is cable in a vertical riser (multi-floor)? CMR required (UL 1666) Continue
Is cable in a tunnel, metro, or high-density tray (>3 L/m)? IEC 60332-3 Class A/B Continue
Is cable in a horizontal tray (moderate density)? IEC Class C or CM Continue
Is cable single and in conduit? VW-1 or IEC 60332-1 Continue

At Dingzun Cable, we offer a free application review to help you select the correct flame retardant rating per NEC, CEC, or IEC codes. Our technical team will review your cable tray density, vertical runs, and local requirements.

8. Key Takeaways for Engineers and Specifiers

Takeaway Implication
Single test ≠ Bundle safety Never assume a VW-1 or IEC 60332-1 cable is safe for a crowded tray or riser
Know your fuel load (L/m) Estimate non-metallic volume per meter; higher density requires higher class (A/B/C)
Plenum is the most stringent (CMP) CMP limits both flame and smoke; required for air handling spaces
Riser prevents floor-to-floor spread (CMR) Required for vertical shafts; flame spread limited to <3.66m
IEC classes A–D match density Class A (7 L/m) for tunnels; Class C (1.5 L/m) for general trays
UL/CSA uses different hierarchy CMX (single) → CM (horizontal) → CMR (riser) → CMP (plenum)
Canadian market often requires FT4/CMG More stringent than US CM for horizontal bundles
Always check local code NEC (US), CEC (Canada), or local IEC-based code dictates minimum rating

At Dingzun Cable, our engineering team stays current on international flame retardant standards. We provide cables with certified test reports — not just "claims" — to support your regulatory compliance and fire safety objectives.

With 20+ years of specialized manufacturing experience, Dingzun Cable is a trusted partner for global industrial facilities, engineering firms, and electrical contractors requiring high-quality flame retardant cables for fire-safe installations. We combine deep materials expertise with extreme customizability to deliver cables that meet your specific fire safety requirements.

latest company news about What is a Flame Retardant Cable?  2

(Dingzun Cable flame retardant cables)

Our Flame Retardant Cable Capabilities:

Capability Dingzun Specification
IEC Standards IEC 60332-1-2 (single), IEC 60332-3-22/23/24/25 (Class A/B/C/D)
UL/CSA Standards VW-1 (CMX), FT1 (CMH), CM (UL 1685 Method 1), FT4/CMG (Method 2), CMR (UL 1666 Riser) , CMP (UL 910 Plenum)
LSZH (Low Smoke Zero Halogen) IEC 61034 (low smoke), IEC 60754 (zero halogen), with flame retardancy
Materials FR-PVC, LSZH, XLPE (flame retardant grades)
Temperature Ratings 70°C to 105°C (PVC/LSZH); 125°C (XLPE)
Conductor Options Bare copper (CU), Tinned (TC)
Shielding Foil, braid, composite (as required)
Certifications ISO 9001:2015, UL, CE, RoHS, REACH
Testing 100% electrical testing; periodic flame testing per standard

Why Dingzun Cable for Your Flame Retardant Cable Needs:

  • Certified flame ratings — Independent test documentation for all FR levels (single to plenum)
  • Complete standard coverage — IEC 60332, UL 1581, UL 1666, UL 910, CSA FT4 — all in-house
  • Expert engineering team — Free consultation on flame rating selection per NEC/CEC/IEC codes
  • Extreme customizability — Length, conductor count, gauge, shielding, jacket color — fully tailored
  • Direct professional communication — Fast quotes, technical datasheets, test reports
  • Global shipping — UL for North America, IEC for international, LSZH for fire-critical applications

Need a flame retardant cable certified for your specific fire safety requirement?

[Contact our technical team today for a free consultation and custom quote].