lk

AFEX VEHICLE FIRE SUPPRESSION SYSTEM TROUBLESHOOTING INSTRUCTIONS

Troubleshooting guidance for AFEX vehicle fire suppression system faults, inspection concerns, pressure issues, discharge indicators, and maintenance questions.

AFEX VEHICLE FIRE SUPPRESSION SYSTEM TROUBLESHOOTING INSTRUCTIONS

Troubleshooting guidance for AFEX vehicle fire suppression system faults, inspection concerns, pressure issues, discharge indicators, and maintenance questions.

AFEX Vehicle Fire Suppression Systems

AFEX fire suppression systems are designed for heavy-duty mobile equipment operating in demanding environments. These systems are commonly used on construction equipment, mining equipment, forestry machines, landfill and waste handling equipment, steel and slag equipment, transportation vehicles, and other mobile machinery where heat, debris, hydraulic oil, fuel, electrical components, and combustible materials can create fire risk.

AFEX systems may include dry chemical agent, liquid agent, or a dual agent configuration. Depending on the system, protection may include automatic detection, a monitor panel, manual actuation, firing mechanisms, hoses, fittings, distribution tubing, nozzles, actuator assemblies, and agent tanks.

This troubleshooting page is designed to help owners, operators, and maintenance teams identify what they are seeing, understand what it may mean, and know when to contact GreasePoint for AFEX fire suppression service.

Important: This guide is not a replacement for the AFEX manual, site safety procedures, NFPA requirements, regulatory requirements, operator training, or certified service. Never tamper with, relocate, remove, recharge, bypass, or repair an AFEX fire suppression system unless you are trained and authorized to do so. If a fault, alarm, abnormal condition, missing component, damaged component, agent residue, power concern, battery concern, or system issue is observed, contact maintenance personnel, AFEX, or an authorized AFEX distributor before operating the equipment.

No Power Light or Monitor Panel Not Normal

What does it mean?

On AFEX systems equipped with a monitor panel, the panel helps show whether the system is actively monitoring and ready. Depending on the system type, a normal condition may be shown by an active display message, a blinking green power light, or no active alarms, trouble indicators, or warning signals.

If the power light is not blinking, the monitor panel does not show normal condition, or the panel appears inactive, the system may not be providing proper protection.

What should I check?

Before operating the equipment, perform a visual check only:

  1. Confirm whether the monitor panel is visible and powered.
  2. Check whether the green power light is blinking, if equipped.
  3. Look for any active problem light, alarm light, warning signal, or audible alarm.
  4. Confirm whether the panel shows a normal monitoring message, if equipped.
  5. Check whether the equipment recently had battery work, electrical work, welding, jump starting, transport, or maintenance.
  6. Look for visible damage to wiring, connectors, detection components, or the panel.
  7. Record the equipment ID, date, shift, operator, and issue observed.

What should I do next?

Do not assume the system is ready if the panel is not showing normal condition. Do not bypass the panel, ignore the issue, or attempt electrical repairs unless you are trained and authorized. Contact maintenance personnel or GreasePoint for AFEX fire suppression service before returning the equipment to operation.

Problem LED, Trouble Message, or Audible Alarm

What does it mean?

An AFEX monitor panel may show a problem light, trouble message, audible horn, or alarm condition when the system detects an issue. Depending on the system, the concern may involve detection, electric actuation, battery condition, external power, system discharge, or an active alarm sequence.

On Compact Panel systems, the amber Problem LED may blink in a code pattern. On Control Unit systems, the display may show messages such as detection problem, electric actuator problem, external power lost, battery low, battery failure, alarm, time to discharge, or discharged.

What should I check?

Before operating the equipment, perform a visual and status check:

  1. Identify whether the issue is a problem light, alarm light, audible alarm, or display message.
  2. Note whether the alarm is active or whether the system appears to be in a discharged mode.
  3. Check for visible agent residue on the machine or ground.
  4. Check whether the equipment recently had maintenance, transport, jump starting, welding, battery work, electrical work, or component replacement.
  5. Look for visible damage to wiring, detection components, actuators, hoses, nozzles, and agent tanks.
  6. Record the exact message, light pattern, or alarm behavior if it can be done safely.
  7. Notify maintenance personnel.

What should I do next?

If an AFEX panel shows a problem light, trouble message, alarm, or audible warning, do not continue operating the equipment until the issue has been reviewed. Contact GreasePoint for AFEX troubleshooting and service support.

Detection Problem or Electric Actuator Problem

What does it mean?

A detection problem may indicate that the detection circuit has an issue, such as an open or grounded circuit. An electric actuator problem may indicate that the electric actuator circuit has an issue, such as an open or grounded circuit.

These issues are especially important on automatic AFEX systems because the detection and actuation components help the system respond to fire conditions.

What should I check?

Do not attempt to repair detection or actuation circuits unless you are trained and authorized. During a visual inspection, check for:

  1. Loose, cut, kinked, damaged, or exposed detection wiring.
  2. Damaged spot sensors or linear detection wire.
  3. Loose or damaged electrical connectors.
  4. Damaged electric actuator wiring or harnesses.
  5. System components that may have been impacted by cleaning, pressure washing, repairs, welding, machine vibration, or debris.
  6. Components contacting moving parts or high-heat areas.
  7. Recent repairs or modifications that may have affected the system.

What should I do next?

Detection and electric actuator concerns should be handled by a qualified service technician. Do not bypass detection wiring, disconnect actuation components, or attempt to clear the problem without proper training. Contact GreasePoint for AFEX fire suppression inspection and repair.

Battery Problem or External Power Problem

What does it mean?

Some AFEX systems rely on monitor panel batteries, internal batteries, external power, or a combination of power sources. A battery problem may mean the internal battery is missing, low, or failing. An external power problem may mean the system is not receiving the expected external power input.

If the system loses power or has a battery issue, continued system operation may not be guaranteed.

What should I check?

Before operating the equipment, visually check:

  1. Whether the monitor panel is powered.
  2. Whether the green power light is blinking, if equipped.
  3. Whether the panel shows a battery problem, battery low, battery failure, or external power message.
  4. Whether the machine recently had battery replacement, jump starting, welding, electrical work, transport, or maintenance.
  5. Whether visible wiring or connectors appear loose, damaged, corroded, or disconnected.
  6. Whether the system was intentionally deactivated for transport or maintenance and not properly returned to service.
  7. Whether the maintenance tag or service documentation indicates recent battery replacement.

What should I do next?

Do not operate equipment if the fire suppression panel is showing a battery or external power problem. Contact maintenance personnel or GreasePoint. If the system was deactivated for maintenance or transport, it should be reactivated and verified according to the proper AFEX procedure by trained personnel before operation.

Missing Safety Pin, Safety Seal, or Nitrogen Cartridge

What does it mean?

Safety pins, safety seals, and nitrogen cartridges are important inspection points on AFEX systems. Actuators should be secured with the proper pin and safety seal, and actuator assemblies should have the required nitrogen cartridge installed.

If a safety pin, safety seal, actuator knob, or nitrogen cartridge is missing, damaged, loose, or appears tampered with, the system needs attention before the equipment is operated.

What should I check?

During a pre-shift inspection, visually check:

  1. Safety pins are present where required.
  2. Safety seals are installed and intact.
  3. Actuators appear secure and undamaged.
  4. AFEX actuator knobs are present on firing mechanisms and remote actuators.
  5. Firing mechanisms, remote actuators, and slave actuators have the required nitrogen cartridge installed, when applicable.
  6. Components are not loose, missing, damaged, or obstructed.
  7. The system has not been tampered with, partially activated, or left incomplete after maintenance.

What should I do next?

Do not operate the equipment if a safety pin, seal, actuator knob, or nitrogen cartridge is missing or damaged. Do not install, remove, or replace cartridges unless you are trained and authorized. Contact GreasePoint for AFEX inspection and service.

Agent Residue or Possible System Discharge

What does it mean?

Visible agent residue on the machine or ground may indicate that the AFEX system discharged or partially discharged. Dry chemical systems may leave visible powder residue, while liquid agent systems may not always produce the same visible external indication.

A discharged system must be inspected, serviced, and recharged before the machine is returned to operation. The source of the fire or discharge condition must also be identified and corrected.

What should I check?

If agent residue or a possible discharge is observed:

  1. Bring the equipment to a safe condition according to site procedures.
  2. Do not restart the machine after a fire or possible discharge event until authorized.
  3. Look for agent residue on the equipment, ground, nozzles, protected areas, agent tanks, hoses, or fittings.
  4. Check for visible heat, fire, impact, or debris damage.
  5. Note whether the monitor panel indicates alarm, discharged, or another abnormal status.
  6. Document what was observed, where it was found, and when it was discovered.
  7. Notify maintenance personnel immediately.

What should I do next?

Do not return the machine to service until the cause of the fire has been identified and corrected, and the AFEX system has been fully inspected, serviced, and recharged by a factory-trained, authorized technician. Contact GreasePoint for AFEX fire suppression service, recharge support, and corrective action.

Damaged, Blocked, Loose, or Moved Components

What does it mean?

AFEX systems are installed to protect specific machine hazard areas, such as engine, transmission, and hydraulic zones. Components must remain securely mounted, properly routed, unobstructed, and positioned as designed.

Damage, loose components, blocked nozzles, missing caps, rubbing hoses, corroded fittings, bent brackets, damaged wiring, or relocated components can reduce system effectiveness or prevent operation.

What should I check?

During a visual inspection, look for:

  1. Agent tanks and mounting brackets with corrosion, dents, loose straps, or structural damage.
  2. Hoses and fittings with leaks, loose connections, abrasion, corrosion, or improper routing.
  3. Detection wiring with loose connections, cuts, kinks, abrasion, or exposed conductors.
  4. Nozzles that are blocked, damaged, loose, missing caps, or no longer aimed properly.
  5. Components rubbing against moving parts or contacting high-heat machine areas.
  6. Brackets, straps, and fasteners that appear loose or missing.
  7. Excessive grease, oil buildup, dirt, combustible material, or debris in protected areas.

What should I do next?

Do not move, aim, repair, replace, or modify AFEX system components unless you are trained and authorized. Document the concern and contact GreasePoint for AFEX system inspection and service before returning the equipment to operation.

Vehicle Modification, Welding, or Hazard Change

What does it mean?

AFEX systems are engineered within specific design limitations and installed around the machine’s protected hazard areas. If the machine changes, the fire risk profile may change too.

Major repairs, machine modifications, welding, jump starting, component replacement, exhaust changes, hydraulic repairs, guarding changes, cleaning changes, and new operating environments can impact the fire suppression system.

What should I check?

Review whether the equipment recently had:

  1. Welding or fabrication work.
  2. Jump starting or major electrical work.
  3. Battery replacement or electrical repairs.
  4. Engine, exhaust, turbo, or fuel system work.
  5. Hydraulic repairs or component replacement.
  6. New guards, shields, attachments, or body modifications.
  7. Cleaning procedure changes or pressure washing near system components.
  8. New operating conditions, such as landfill, forestry, mining, demolition, waste handling, steel, slag, or high-debris environments.

What should I do next?

If the machine or hazard area has changed, the AFEX system should be reviewed by a qualified technician. Do not assume the original system layout still protects the equipment properly. Contact GreasePoint to review the equipment, inspect the AFEX system, and determine whether service or adjustments are needed.

Maintenance Tag Missing or Recertification Overdue

What does it mean?

The maintenance tag or certificate helps confirm that the system is being inspected and maintained within the required timeframes. A missing or outdated tag may indicate that the AFEX system is overdue for inspection, recertification, or service.

AFEX recommends recertification every 1,000 to 1,200 operating hours or every 3 to 4 months, whichever occurs first. Recertification intervals should not exceed 6 months.

What should I check?

  • Confirm that the maintenance tag or certificate is present.
  • Check whether the service date is current.
  • Review the hour meter and compare it to the service interval.
  • Confirm whether any prior issues were documented and corrected.
  • Check whether the system has been operating in harsh conditions that may require more frequent inspection.
  • Review whether service records are being retained according to site procedures.
  • Confirm whether battery replacement, hose replacement, agent replacement, actuator replacement, hydrotest, or other interval-based maintenance may be due.

What should I do next?

If the tag is missing, out of date, unclear, or the system is approaching the recertification interval, schedule AFEX service with GreasePoint. Harsh operating environments may require more frequent review to keep the system ready.

None Are What You’re Experiencing?

f you are unsure what you are seeing, do not guess. AFEX fire suppression systems protect people, equipment, and operations in high-risk environments. A small issue, such as a problem light, missing safety seal, damaged nozzle, blocked distribution path, loose fitting, or overdue recertification, can become a serious problem if ignored.

Download GreasePoint’s AFEX Pre-Shift Inspection Checklist to support daily inspections, document concerns, and prepare for service.

If you would rather talk to a person than troubleshoot from a document, GreasePoint is here to help.