EstatePass
Project MgmtSafetymedium20% of exam part

Your project requires hot work in an area 40 feet from combustible materials that cannot be moved. What is the minimum fire watch duration required after completion of hot work?

Correct Answer

C) 1 hour

When hot work is performed within 35 feet of combustible materials, a fire watch must be maintained for at least one hour after completion of the work to ensure no smoldering or delayed ignition occurs.

Answer Options
A
15 minutes
B
30 minutes
C
1 hour
D
2 hours

Why This Is the Correct Answer

CORRECT_ANSWER - When hot work is performed within 35 feet of combustible materials that cannot be moved, fire safety codes require a minimum one-hour fire watch after work completion. Since the scenario describes work 40 feet from combustibles, this still falls under enhanced fire watch requirements due to the proximity and immovable nature of the materials. The one-hour duration ensures adequate time to detect any smoldering, sparks, or delayed ignition that could occur after the visible work is complete.

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option A: 15 minutes

15 minutes is insufficient for detecting delayed ignition or smoldering materials that can occur well after hot work completion, especially when combustible materials are nearby.

Option B: 30 minutes

30 minutes does not meet the minimum code requirement for fire watch duration when hot work occurs near combustible materials that cannot be relocated.

Option D: 2 hours

2 hours exceeds the minimum required fire watch duration and would be unnecessarily costly and time-consuming for standard hot work operations near combustibles.

Memory Technique

Think 'Hot Hour' - hot work near combustibles requires one hour of watching. The '35-foot rule' triggers the one-hour minimum fire watch requirement.

Reference Hint

Florida Building Code Chapter 26 - Fire Safety During Construction, or NFPA 51B Standard for Fire Prevention During Welding, Cutting, and Other Hot Work

More Project Mgmt Questions

People Also Study

Practice More Contractor Exam Questions

Access all practice questions with progress tracking and adaptive difficulty to pass your Florida General Contractor exam.

Start Practicing