How does pink plasterboard burn?
Discussion
Does anyone have any pink plasterboard that they feel like recording and setting on fire? I've not managed to find a video. Lots of speculation and thoughts but no actual footage.
Just interested to see how it actually does burn when hit with heat and also a flame.
Anyone care to indulge me?
Thanks
Just interested to see how it actually does burn when hit with heat and also a flame.
Anyone care to indulge me?
Thanks
It’s one of the least combustible materials you’ll find. When tested to BS476 which tests it to some pretty unfavourable conditions it achieves A2-s1,d0 which basically means it doesn’t burn, doesn’t smoke and doesn’t drip when exposed to a sustained flame.
Edited by smokey mow on Monday 10th February 22:55
smokey mow said:
It’s one of the least combustible materials you’ll find. When tested to BS476 which tests it to some pretty unfavourable conditions it achieves A2-s1,d0 which basically means it doesn’t burn, doesn’t smoke and doesn’t drip when exposed to a sustained flame.
Sycamore said:
I used to build test pieces for BS476 tests and it's somewhat unnerving how you can be throwing 1000 degrees at it via what looks like a fighter jet with the afterburners on and it just sort of does.... nothing 
Thank you.
So what happens to the paper layer on pink board? Will it catch, or not.
Does the board (the actual structural plaster part) eventually crumble?
Thanks
TCruise said:
smokey mow said:
It’s one of the least combustible materials you’ll find. When tested to BS476 which tests it to some pretty unfavourable conditions it achieves A2-s1,d0 which basically means it doesn’t burn, doesn’t smoke and doesn’t drip when exposed to a sustained flame.
Sycamore said:
I used to build test pieces for BS476 tests and it's somewhat unnerving how you can be throwing 1000 degrees at it via what looks like a fighter jet with the afterburners on and it just sort of does.... nothing 
Thank you.
So what happens to the paper layer on pink board? Will it catch, or not.
Does the board (the actual structural plaster part) eventually crumble?
Thanks
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