Engineer Peer Review
Equipment Certification
Engineer Peer Review
Getting hemp extraction equipment to market has never been easier. In order to do a proper certification your equipment, but have that report be accepted by a municipality, the author of the engineering report has to have the right experience and professional engineer standing. The author of the engineer peer reviews that C1D1 Labs will help you achieve, is both a PE mechanical engineer and PE fire protection engineer in over 26 states. In addition, our lead engineer is a certified building code expert, fire inspector, and architectural engineer. These levels of engineering experience give trust to our reports. In addition to the level of trust we have built becoming a leader in fire protection in the extraction industry, municipalities will recognize our engineers for our previous engineer peer reviews for some of the most well known equipment manufactures in the industry. NFPA, IFC, and state plant extraction codes require a NRTL listing or a technical report, or engineer peer review, to get your equipment accepted by a local municipality. We can have you up to code within a month. Don’t wait, fill out the contact form below to learn more about the C1D1 Labs engineer peer review services.
Extraction Lab Field Verification
1. Equipment Field Verification: An on-site inspection and verification of extraction and related equipment that was approved for use via an engineering peer review (EPR). This inspection and verification ensures that the correct equipment was installed for the intended use, that the equipment was assembled correctly per the engineering peer review, and that the necessary appurtenances and ancillary systems were installed correctly to work with the equipment. This verification also identifies the serial and model numbers of the equipment and cross references the serial and model numbers with the manufacturer to ensure the proper equipment was used and that the equipment is properly documented in perpetuity and that it is only used at its intended location.
2. Facility Field Verification: An on-site inspection and verification of the conditions, restrictions, layouts, and other fire code criteria contained within the fire protection engineer’s fire code compliance report. This inspection ensures that the correct number of control areas were built and were built using fire resistance rated construction, that hazardous solvents are stored in approved containers using approved methods, that any required fire protection systems are installed, and any of the other requirements outlined in the fire protection engineer’s report. The facility field verification is related to the equipment field verification, and can be considered an extension thereof, verifying that the extraction process will take place in the code compliant environment specified in the fire protection engineer’s report.
If You Build It, They Will Come
Fill out the form below to ask us how to get started. Our C1D1 experts are knowledgeable on extraction rooms, cleanrooms, hydrocarbon closed loop systems, chillers, pumps, and more. Or give us a call
(510) 410-1083
C1D1 Labs Blogs
Giving you the tools and information you need to be successful

C1D1 Booths and Industrial Extraction Room Design: A Code-Driven Planning Framework
How C1D1 booths, hydrocarbon extraction equipment, and ethanol extraction equipment fit into a code-driven facility plan built around fire code, building code, and engineering review.

Navigating Fire Code Requirements for Ethanol Extraction Equipment
The integration of robust ethanol extraction equipment into industrial processing environments requires stringent adherence to national and international fire safety standards.

Optimizing Industrial Extraction Room Layouts for Code Compliance
Designing an industrial extraction facility requires rigorous attention to equipment layout, fire protection engineering, and strict adherence to international building and fire codes. Whether operating hydrocarbon extraction equipment or scaling up with industrial ethanol extraction processes, establishing a cohesive, compliant extraction room layout is vital to mitigating risk, reducing insurance loss ratios, and maintaining peak operational efficiency. Proper facility planning