This is a bit over the top but the principle is the same
"EIGHTY per cent of schools, hospitals and public buildings are in danger of "raining fires" from electrical lights because the wrong type of diffuser panel has been installed, a trade association claimed yesterday.
The type B diffusers, used to cover recessed lights in suspended ceilings, are almost indistinguishable from the safe type A diffusers.
Both types are usually frosted, but tests conducted at the Warrington fire research centre have shown type B thermoplastics ignite within seconds of an electrical fault and dribble burning drips that spread the blaze on to furniture, carpets and office papers.
Martin Rankle, chairman of the Association of Lighting Diffuser Manufacturers, called for a ban on "type B" thermoplastic diffusers. The association's campaign will be addressed in a Department of Environment consultation paper.
"This is not a minor fire regulation violation, but a danger to many lives," said Mr Rankle. "Within three minutes of the fire starting you get a flash-over because so much heat and smoke is generated. There would be no chance of evacuating a hospital or school."
Several other associations, including the Lighting Industry Federation and the Institute of Building Control, support the campaign for a ban. The flammable diffusers are closely regulated by fire regulations introduced in 1992, but are nevertheless installed because they are cheaper.
A type A diffuser panel costs £4, twice as much as the same size panel made from a type B material. Type A panels also transmit a quarter less light than type B.
Britain's largest fire since the war at the BASF plant at Wilton, Teeside, in October 1995, spread largely because type B light diffusers had been installed, Mr Rankle claimed. Type B diffusers have also been blamed for a £10 million fire that destroyed thousands of historical records at Norwich Library.
Hazel Blears, Labour MP for Salford, said she was "horrified" by the demonstrations she had been shown. "These materials are the difference between life and death," she said. "It is not a parochial matter, but an issue of national concern."
Mrs Blears claimed manufacturers had admitted to her they supplied type B diffusers because of commercial pressures when tendering for public building contracts."