Facility Support PRODUCTS Introduction
This section is in active development as our product inventory is being built. Additional tools and facility support items are added regularly as the catalog expands toward the full 100+ product line.
This section is in active development as our product inventory is being built. Additional tools and facility support items are added regularly as the catalog expands toward the full 100+ product line.
Our Facility Support Products are selected to support maintenance, inspection, and compliance work across federal, commercial, and private facilities. Each item is listed with retail pricing, and shipping is always included at no additional cost.
Our quote‑based model keeps pricing transparent, documentation clean, and procurement aligned with federal and commercial expectations—without the complexity of a shopping cart or online checkout.
To purchase, customers simply navigate to the product page and click “Get Quote.” We'll return an email with your pricing. This ensures accurate lead times, confirms availability, and allows us to apply discounts when products are combined with our service offerings or bundled into a facility support package.
Clamp‑on meters allow facility personnel to measure current on live conductors without disconnecting equipment, supporting OSHA 1910 Subpart S requirements for minimizing exposure to energized parts. These tools are widely used in NFPA 70B preventive maintenance programs to diagnose overloads, unbalanced phases, and equipment performance issues safely and efficiently.
Circuit testing tools provide quick, essential electrical safety checks used in facility support to verify energized circuits, continuity, and proper wiring before maintenance work. These instruments support OSHA electrical safety requirements, NFPA 70E “test‑before‑touch” practices, and NFPA 70B preventive maintenance standards across regulated facilities.
Digital manometers provide precise pressure measurements for HVAC, ventilation, and building systems, helping facility personnel verify airflow, static pressure, and equipment performance during maintenance. These instruments support NFPA 90A/90B ventilation standards and OSHA requirements for maintaining safe, properly balanced air systems in occupied facilities.
Gas detectors provide continuous or point‑in‑time monitoring for combustible, toxic, or oxygen‑deficient atmospheres, helping facility personnel identify hazardous conditions before entry or maintenance work. These instruments support OSHA 1910.146 (Confined Spaces), OSHA 1910.1000 (Air Contaminants), and NFPA 54/58 requirements for safe operation of fuel‑burning and gas‑powered systems in regulated facilities.
HVAC test instruments support facility personnel in diagnosing refrigerant systems, combustion performance, CO levels, gas leaks, airflow, and overall equipment operation during maintenance and troubleshooting. These tools align with OSHA indoor air quality and combustion‑safety expectations and support NFPA 90A/90B and NFPA 54/31 requirements for verifying safe, efficient heating, cooling, and ventilation systems in occupied buildings.
Inspection cameras allow facility personnel to visually assess concealed or hard‑to‑reach areas inside walls, ceilings, equipment housings, and piping without disassembly. These tools support OSHA’s general‑duty requirements for safe maintenance practices and align with NFPA 70B preventive maintenance guidance by helping identify hazards, moisture intrusion, wiring damage, and mechanical failures before they escalate.
Line and fault locators help facility personnel trace buried, concealed, or inaccessible electrical and communication lines and pinpoint breaks, shorts, or load issues without destructive access. These tools support OSHA’s requirements for safe excavation and utility identification and align with NFPA 70B maintenance practices by reducing accidental damage, downtime, and electrical hazards during repairs or upgrades.
Multimeters provide precise measurement of voltage, current, resistance, and continuity, giving facility personnel the diagnostic detail required for safe electrical troubleshooting and equipment verification. These instruments support OSHA 1910 Subpart S electrical safety practices and align with NFPA 70B maintenance standards by enabling accurate assessment of circuit conditions, load issues, and component failures during preventive and corrective maintenance.
Phase meters help facility personnel verify phase rotation, balance, and proper sequencing on three‑phase equipment before startup or maintenance. These instruments support OSHA electrical safety practices and align with NFPA 70B maintenance standards by preventing reverse‑rotation damage, motor failures, and unsafe energization of critical building systems.
Psychrometers measure temperature, humidity, and dew point to help facility personnel assess indoor air quality, moisture conditions, and HVAC system performance. These instruments support OSHA expectations for maintaining safe indoor environments and align with NFPA 90A/90B ventilation standards by helping identify conditions that contribute to mold, condensation, and equipment inefficiency.
Test leads and accessories provide the safe, reliable connection points required for accurate electrical measurements during maintenance and troubleshooting. These components support OSHA 1910 Subpart S and NFPA 70E practices by ensuring workers maintain proper insulation, secure contact, and reduced exposure when using meters and diagnostic instruments in energized environments.
Thermometers allow facility personnel to verify equipment temperatures, HVAC discharge air, surface conditions, and thermal trends during routine maintenance. These instruments support OSHA expectations for maintaining safe indoor environments and align with NFPA 70B preventive maintenance practices by helping identify overheating components, airflow issues, and early signs of equipment failure.
Voltage detectors give facility personnel a fast, non‑contact way to confirm the presence of energized conductors before performing maintenance or applying lockout/tagout. These tools support OSHA 1910 Subpart S and NFPA 70E “test‑before‑touch” requirements by helping workers verify electrical conditions with minimal exposure to live parts.