WORKERS SAFETY
DEPEND ON THE RIGHT
ELECTRICAL PPE

YOUR WISE DECISION SAVES LIVES!

THE TRUSTED BRAND IN PROTECTIVE APPAREL 

WHY ELECTRICAL PPE?

Electrical PPE is specially designed to protect against Arc Flash hazards and classified as Arc-Rated (AR). Arc Flash Suits can protect electrical workers from serious injuries caused from electrical and other common hazards at workplaces and replace regular work clothes to mitigate the risk of arc flash burn injuries. A Standard PPE gear or kit usually comprises an Arc Flash Suit, Hood and Face Shield, Gloves, Safety Glasses, Ear Plugs etc.

It is imperative that the first step in protecting your workers from electrical hazards is to evaluate exactly what arc hazards may occur in each unique industrial and utility location. When an arc flash analysis has been performed and markers have been placed on your equipment, these markers will include incident energy levels or arc flash PPE categories on them. The incident energy level should be listed in cal/cm2. This means that the highest energy level that this equipment can produce in an arc flash event will not exceed the posted cal/cm2 rating.
However, in determining the safety measures and the correct HRC level, a professional evaluation on the risk exposures are both complex and costly. Therefore, the selection of a higher-level PPE to protect the workers is a wise and safer choice.

Your Arc Flash Suit should contain a label that has an Arc Thermal Protective Value (ATPV) rating listed in cal/cm2. The ATPV rating means that the rated PPE will protect the wearer from arc flash energies up to that ATPV value. The Arc Flash PPE is only effective for equipment that has incident energy levels that are lower than the ATPV rating of the PPE. This is a fundamental understanding that all electrical workers should have.

Arc Flash Category

Arc Flash PPE Categories are used in the current NFPA 70E standard to inform workers about the protection they need while working on energized equipment. Each category includes a minimum Arc Rating (AR) value for the required PPE. This value is determined by the PPE manufacturer, and indicates the amount of heat energy (in cal/cm²) that the clothing can absorb or block before the wearer would be likely to receive a second-degree burn.

The ratings are defined by the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) for arc flash rated clothing of all types. The energy levels measured as calories per centimetre squared (cal/cm2) are defined as:

HIGH RISK
CATEGORY 1

Minimum Arc Rating of
4 cal/cm²

HIGH RISK
CATEGORY 2

Minimum Arc Rating of
8 cal/cm²

HIGH RISK
CATEGORY 3

Minimum Arc Rating of

25 cal/cm²

HIGH RISK
CATEGORY 4

Minimum Arc Rating of
4O cal/cm²

OUR EXPERTISE

Sherwood Protective Apparel, a specialist in PPE products in Coveralls and Jackets & Pants, made with DuPont™ NOMEX® and Solvay PROBAN® tailored to the Oil & Gas, Petrochemicals, Electric Utility, Fire Fighting and General Industries. Applicable products of SHERWOOD™FR are tested to meet the International Fire Safety Standards in NFPA 2112 certified by Underwriters Laboratory (UL), USA and EN ISO 11612 by BTTG UK.

SHERWOOD™AR (Arc Rated), marketed as Sherwood Arc Flash Ensemble (SAFE) range of Arcflash Suit for application in HRC 1 to HRC 4. We offer engineered solutions for Arcflash Suit in collaboration with DuPont™USA through tests to ASTM Standards F1959, F1506 and F2621 by Kinetrics, Canada. We also package our Arc Rated (AR) solutions with the right accessories as a kit packed in an exclusively designed bag.

Third party laboratories test applicable SHERWOOD™AR products to ensure our compliance with the required international standards. Applicable Arc-Rated (AR) products range in Sherwood Arc Flash Ensemble (SAFE) are tested to ASTM Standards F1959, F1506 and F2621 by Kinetrics, Canada. These certifications provide critical credibility to our clients and help mitigate risk, demonstrate compliance and deliver confidence to markets worldwide.