FM200 Maintenance in Dubai
FM200 maintenance in Dubai involves checking cylinder pressure and weight, the release panel, detection, nozzles, warning devices, and room integrity, then documenting it for DCD records. QSERV, a DCD-approved contractor, maintains FM200 clean agent systems for server rooms, telecom rooms, and electrical rooms, including refilling and recommissioning after discharge.
DCD-approved · 12+ years in Dubai fire safety · Hassantuk-integrated · 18,000+ customers served
FM200 systems need more than a visual look
A clean agent system depends on correct cylinder condition, detection, releasing controls, pipework, nozzles, alarms and enclosure integrity. Maintenance keeps these parts visible and documented.
- Cylinder pressure and weight observations.
- Release panel and detection checks.
- Nozzle and pipework visual review.
- Warning alarm, abort and manual release checks.
- Room integrity and sealing recommendations.
Protect server rooms without water damage
FM200 maintenance is especially important for IT rooms because a discharged, leaking or disabled system leaves high-value equipment exposed.
- Server rooms and data closets.
- Telecom and electrical rooms.
- Archives and control rooms.
- Discharge recovery and recommissioning.
- Refilling and hydrotesting coordination.
Answers, Before You Ask
Answers for Dubai facility managers, business operators, consultants, contractors, and property teams comparing DCD-compliant service providers.
01 How often should FM200 systems be maintained?
FM200 systems should be inspected at least every six months and serviced annually, with cylinder weight and pressure checks. Critical rooms such as server rooms usually need scheduled inspection plus annual records for Civil Defence compliance.
02 What happens after FM200 discharge?
The cause should be investigated, the room made safe, cylinders refilled or replaced, and the system recommissioned before the room relies on it again.
03 Does QSERV support room integrity checks?
QSERV can review sealing and integrity concerns and coordinate the testing or corrective scope needed for the protected room.