Knowledge Center

Categories

Picture of Nick ( Ni Chenda)

Nick ( Ni Chenda)

Dipl.-Ing. Chenda Ni

How to Specify Fire-Safe Valves: API 607 vs. API 6FA vs. ISO 10497

Evaluating valve fire-test standards is critical for safety compliance in high-risk oil, gas, and petrochemical projects. This technical article clarifies the core distinctions between API 607, API 6FA, and ISO 10497. By breaking down their targeted seat materials (soft vs. metal), testing methodologies, and post-burn operational sequences, this guide provides a straightforward framework to help project engineers and procurement teams specify the correct fire-safe certification for their piping systems without over-specifying.

In critical flow control applications—like oil refineries, chemical processing plants, and offshore platforms—a valve is your final line of defense. When a fire strikes, soft-seated valves (using materials like PTFE or rubber) will melt. If a valve fails to isolate hazardous media during an explosion, the results are catastrophic.

To ensure safety compliance, engineering and procurement teams rely on fire-test certifications. However, navigating API 607, API 6FA, and ISO 10497 can be confusing. Are they interchangeable? Which one does your piping system actually require?

This technical guide eliminates the guesswork by breaking down the three leading fire-safe standards, their real-world methodologies, and how to choose the right one for your project.

The 3 Core Fire-Test Standards Explained

API 607: The Downstream Standard for Soft-Seated Valves

Maintained by the refining segment of the American Petroleum Institute, API 607 is the world’s most specified fire-safe standard for quarter-turn valves.

  • Scope: It specifically targets quarter-turn valves (like ball valves and butterfly valves) equipped with nonmetallic (soft) seating.
  • The Logic: Since soft seats are guaranteed to burn away in a fire, API 607 tests the valve’s secondary backup sealing mechanism (usually metal-to-metal contact). It ensures the valve can hold pressure after the primary seal is completely destroyed.
  • Low-Pressure Reality: When plant fire systems trigger a shutdown, pipeline pressure often drops. Low pressure makes sealing tougher because there is less line force pushing the ball into the seat. API 607 uniquely mandates a low-pressure test phase to guarantee tight shutoff under all fire conditions.

API 6FA: The Upstream Standard for General & Metal-Seated Valves

Managed under the API Subcommittee on Valves and Wellhead Equipment, API 6FA focuses on the upstream oil and gas extraction sector.

  • Scope: It applies to general valves designed to API 6A (wellheads) and API 6D (pipelines), typically covering gate valves, globe valves, and heavy metal-seated products.
  • The Logic: Metal-seated valves do not melt, but they easily fail due to uneven thermal expansion. For example, if a gate valve’s bonnet expands faster than the stem under heat, it can lift the gate right off the seat.
  • Operational Focus: API 6FA heavily prioritizes the valve’s structural and operational integrity after it cools down, verifying if the valve can physically cycle open and closed after severe thermal distortion.

ISO 10497: The Global Baseline for International Projects

Published by the International Organization for Standardization, ISO 10497 is the default international fire-test framework outside of North American-dominated sectors.

  • Scope: It sets a unified global baseline for testing any industrial valve subjected to flame exposure.
  • The Alignment: While ISO originally modeled this standard after API 6FA, recent technical revisions have shifted its framework. Today, the current edition of ISO 10497 is identical to API 607.

The 30-Minute Fire Protocol: What Happens in the Lab?

To simulate a worst-case industrial disaster, all three standards utilize a remarkably aggressive laboratory testing environment, divided into three critical stages:

  1. The 30-Minute Burn Phase: The valve is pressurized and engulfed in direct, open flames ranging between 760°C and 982°C (1400°F to 1800°F) for 30 continuous minutes. This matches the critical time window an emergency team has to control a localized fire before major structural failure occurs.
  2. The Natural Cool-Down Phase: The flames are cut, but internal line pressure is fully maintained. The valve is allowed to cool naturally to test how the body metal and specialized seals handle severe thermal shock and contractive stresses.
  3. The Post-Burn & Operational Phase: Technicians precisely measure external leakage (via the stem packing and body gaskets) and through-seat internal leakage against strict milliliter-per-minute allowances. Finally, the valve must successfully cycle open or closed to ensure it has not completely seized under heat.

Side-by-Side Comparison: Key Differences & Similarities

While these standards look similar on paper, their field execution and target valve types reveal critical differences that engineers must watch closely.

Technical CriteriaAPI 607ISO 10497API 6FA
Industry SegmentDownstream (Refineries, Chemical Plants)Global General Industry / Multi-SectorUpstream (Wellheads, Drilling, Pipelines)
Primary Valve TypesQuarter-turn (Ball, Butterfly) with soft seatsQuarter-turn and general industrial valvesGate, Globe, Check, and Metal-Seated valves
Burn Duration & Temp30 Mins @ 760–982°C (1400–1800°F)30 Mins @ 760–982°C (1400–1800°F)30 Mins @ 760–982°C (1400–1800°F)
Testing PositionOpen or ClosedOpen or ClosedOpen or Closed
Low-Pressure TestingMandated (Crucial for soft seats)MandatedNot explicitly emphasized
Operational SequenceLeak test occurs before cycling the valveLeak test occurs before cycling the valveOperational cycle occurs before final leak evaluations
RelationshipIdentical / Mirror Standard to ISO 10497Identical / Mirror Standard to API 607Distinct methodology from API 607

Critical Takeaways on Interchangeability

  • API 607 vs. ISO 10497 (The Mirror Standards): This is your best shortcut for dual-certification. Because their technical criteria are completely aligned, an official API 607 test automatically covers ISO 10497 requirements. Manufacturers can easily dual-certify their soft-seated ball valves to satisfy both US and European tenders simultaneously.
  • API 607 vs. API 6FA (Non-Interchangeable): These two cannot be substituted for one another. They serve different sectors (downstream vs. upstream) and use different post-burn evaluation sequences. API 607 measures leak rates before cycling the valve, while API 6FA cycles the valve before evaluating final leaks.
  • The Seat Material Rule: If your ball valve relies on a PTFE or nylon soft seat, API 607 / ISO 10497 is your gold standard. If you are dealing with an all-metal, heavy-duty gate or check valve, API 6FA or API 6FD is the correct specification.

Project Selection: How to Choose Wisely

Specifying the wrong standard can lead to costly project delays or severe safety liabilities. Use this straightforward framework for your data sheets:

  • Choose API 607 / ISO 10497 if: Your project involves petrochemical processing, LNG terminals, oil tank farms, or automated chemical lines utilizing soft-seated ball or butterfly valves.
  • Choose API 6FA if: Your project involves upstream wellhead manifolds, oilfield extraction, or long-distance transport pipelines utilizing metal-seated gate or globe valves.
  • Do you need both API 6D and API 607? Yes, very often. API 6D guarantees the valve’s structural wall thickness, material grade, and operational performance under normal, everyday pipeline use. API 607 acts as the vital emergency insurance policy. For any line carrying flammable or toxic fluids, demanding a dual-certified valve is industry best practice.

Conclusion

Fire safety and valve quality are deeply connected. In a highly competitive global market, choosing the right fire-test standard isn’t just about ticking a compliance box—it is about protecting human lives, securing physical facility assets, and preventing devastating environmental disasters.

Always map your media properties, seat materials, and regional mandates before finalizing a procurement spec. Ensuring your valves carry a verified API 607 or ISO 10497 stamp from an accredited independent testing lab is the ultimate guarantee that your flow control infrastructure will stand strong under fire.

Share the Post:

Related Posts

API 600 and API 602 Gate Valves Explained: Design Differences, Applications, and Selection Criteria

Choosing between API 600 and API 602 gate valves is a critical decision in industrial piping design. While both standards are widely used for isolation service in oil and gas, petrochemical, power generation, and chemical processing applications, they are intended for different operating conditions and piping configurations. API 600 gate valves are typically cast steel valves designed for medium- and large-diameter pipelines, offering robust construction, high flow capacity, and excellent maintainability. API 602 gate valves, on the other hand, are forged steel valves primarily used in small-bore, high-pressure piping systems where compact design, mechanical strength, and pressure integrity are essential. This technical guide compares API 600 and API 602 gate valves in terms of construction, size range, pressure ratings, bonnet designs, applications, and selection criteria, helping engineers and procurement professionals choose the most suitable valve standard for their projects.

Read More

Ball Valve Selection: Full Bore or Reduced Bore?

Deciding between Full Bore and Reduced Bore ball valves for your industrial piping system? This comprehensive engineering guide breaks down the technical differences in pressure drop (Cv), actuation torque, and weight. Learn how internal geometry impacts your system’s CAPEX vs. OPEX balance, media suitability, and pigging requirements to ensure optimal valve selection for your P&ID specifications.

Read More

Join Our Newsletter

Scroll to Top

Get Your Free Technical Guide & Price List

* The data you provide will be used solely for processing your business inquiries and deliver-ing professionaltechnical support. We hereby commit that your information will never besold or disclosed to any third party, andthat it will be strictly protected in accordance withapplicable privacy standards. You may contact us at any time
to update or request the dele-tion of your personal information.