Skip to Main Content
Building Safety Journal Logo

Building Safety Journal - International Code Council

Main Menu

Menu

      • January, 2026 Articles
      • December, 2025 Articles
      • November, 2025 Articles
      • October, 2025 Articles
      • September, 2025 Articles
      • August, 2025 Articles
      • 2026 Articles
      • 2025 Articles
      • Deep Dives
      • Member News
      • Personal Perspectives
      • Quick Hits
      • Technical Topics
      • Press Releases
      • Sponsored Content
      • View All
      • Buildings, Construction, Architecture/Design
      • Fire, Wildland-Urban Interface
      • Plumbing, Mechanical, Fuel Gas, Pools/Spas
      • Energy, Solar, Green, Sustainability
      • Disaster Preparedness, Mitigation, Resiliency
  • Subscribe
    • ICC Family of Solutions
    • ICCSafe
    • myICC
    • Digital Codes
    • cdpACCESS
    • Store
    • Support

Join today!

Keep up-to-date on crucial industry news, innovative training and expert technical advice with a free subscription to the award-winning Building Safety Journal.

Subscribe

Sign In or Register Here

Provide your email address
Provide your password
Answer the math challenge
Please enter your e-mail address below. We will email you a link to reset your password.
Provide your email address
Answer the math challenge
To complete your registration, please verify your email address.
Answer the math challenge

We have emailed the address you provided. Please click the link in the email to confirm your email address.

Your account has been marked for password reset. Please change your password.
Provide your new password
Verify your new password
Answer the math challenge 7 minus zero

Only registered ICC members have access to this article at this time.

Explore all the benefits that ICC Membership has to offer and become a member today to gain access to this exciting content.

If you're already an ICC member Sign In Now.

Can We Help?

  • Reset My Password
  • I Need More Help

Code Corner: 2024 IFGC Chapter 6 Specific Appliances

The Code Corner explores sections of the International Codes® (I-Codes®) each month, focusing on key elements of these essential codes. This month, we’re spotlighting the scope of Chapter 6 of the 2024 International Fuel Gas Code®.

February 11th, 2026
by Gary Gauthier
  • Technical Topics

The International Codes® (I-Codes®), developed by the International Code Council (ICC), are a family of fifteen coordinated, modern building safety codes that help ensure the design and construction of safe, sustainable and affordable structures. 

The I-Codes are the most widely adopted set of model codes globally, implemented in all 50 U.S. states and many countries around the world.  

The Building Safety Journal’s series, Code Corner, explores sections of the I-Codes each month, focusing on key elements of these essential codes. This month, we’re spotlighting the scope of Chapter 6 of the 2024 International Fuel Gas Code® (IFGC®): Specific Appliances. 

International Fuel Gas Code 602.1 General 

Decorative appliances for installation in approved solid fuel-burning fireplaces shall be listed in accordance with ANSI Z21.60/CSA 2.26 and shall be installed in accordance with the manufacturer’s instructions. Manually lighted natural gas decorative appliances shall be listed in accordance with ANSI Z21.84. 

These appliances include gas log sets that are designed to simulate wood fires (see Commentary Figure 602.1). Sections 301 through 310 address the requirements for testing, labeling and installing mechanical equipment and appliances. The gas-burning appliance must be tested to the standard or standards appropriate for the equipment. The testing agency is responsible for determining the standard to be used to test the equipment. In the case of decorative gas log sets, ANSI Z21.60 or Z21.84 is the applicable test standard. 

Labeling is the code official’s assurance that the subject product is a representative duplication of the product that the testing agency tested in the laboratory. The label indicates that an independent agency has conducted inspections at the plant to verify that all units conform to the specifications that the quality control manual sets forth for fabricating the gas appliances. Information that must be contained on the label is described in Section 301.5 and includes the manufacturer’s identification, the third-party inspection agency’s identification, the model number, the serial number, the input ratings and the type of fuel the appliance is designed to burn. 

The code requires that the appliance be installed in accordance with the manufacturer’s instructions. This requirement is also linked to the laboratory testing of the appliance because the laboratory used the same instructions to install the prototype appliance being tested. When the appliance has been tested and evaluated for code compliance and judged to meet the performance and construction requirements of the applicable standard, the installation instructions become an integral part of the labeling requirements and must be strictly adhered to. 

The intent of this section is to regulate gas-burning appliances that are accessory to, and designed for installation in, vented solid-fuel-burning fireplaces. Gas-fired decorative log sets and log lighters are examples of accessory appliances that are designed for installation in solid-fuel-burning fireplaces. Gas log sets provide some radiant heat; however, their primary function is to create an aesthetically pleasing simulation of a wood log fire. This section addresses vented appliances and does not address “unvented gas log sets” (room heaters). 

Decorative gas-burning appliances, such as some gas log sets, are designed to simulate wood fires by intentionally causing incomplete combustion as necessary to yield yellow or yellow-tipped flames. This incomplete combustion results in an increase in the amount of carbon monoxide produced. The highly toxic carbon monoxide is odorless and colorless, and the accompanying products of combustion produced by a gas-burning appliance do not have a strong odor or an odor that is readily recognized by an untrained person. 

If a decorative gas appliance were operated with the fireplace damper closed, the carbon monoxide levels could be dangerously high before the building occupants became aware of the hazard. To prevent harm and the possible asphyxiation of the occupants, it is imperative that the fireplace damper be open whenever the appliance is burning. The manufacturer’s installation instructions will specify the minimum free area of damper opening required to vent the appliance combustion products. The damper area is proportional to the appliance’s input rating. The fireplace damper plate must be removed or permanently fixed in a position that provides the opening area required by the appliance manufacturer’s installation instructions. 

Commentary Figure 602.1—Vented Gas Log Set

To learn more about ICC’s IFGC, click here. To stay updated on the latest PMG industry news, subscribe to ICC’s PMG newsletter here. 

About the Author
Gary Gauthier
Gary has over 40 years of experience working within the Construction and Plumbing Industry. He is a seasoned Construction Project Manager as well as a Licensed Master Plumber in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine and Vermont. In addition, Gary holds an Unrestricted Construction Supervisor’s License (CSL) within the state of Massachusetts and completely understands the significance of code correlation. Lastly, while working with the International Code Council, he is currently an Adult Educational Master Plumbing & Fuel Gas Instructor and Continuing Education Instructor in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Member of the International Code Council PMG Team responsible for developing, coordinating, directing and implementing programs to ensure the successful completion of the Government Relations goals and objectives as they apply to the International Plumbing Code, International Mechanical Code, International Fuel Gas Code, International Swimming Pool and Spa Code, and the International Private Sewage Disposal Code (and related services and programs of the International Code Council).
Submissions
Check out upcoming BSJ topics and send us articles for consideration:
Or send by email

Want to advertise in the BSJ?
Click Here

Share on Facebook
Facebook
Tweet about this on Twitter
Twitter
Share on LinkedIn
Linkedin

  • 25 25503 CORP Code Enforcement Program BSJ Ad 270x270 WAD FINAL
  • 25 25497 2026 CAH BSJ 270x270 WAD FINAL
  • 25 25461 MEM Community BSJ 270x270 WAD FINAL Week1
  • 25 25449 TRN EduCode 2026 BSJ BSJW AD 270x270 FINALb
International Code Council
International Code Council
International Code Council
International Code Council

Subscribe to the Building Safety Journal

Subscribe

Connect with Us

  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Instagram

oneICC

  • ICC Evaluation Service
  • International Accreditation Service
  • General Code
  • S. K. Gosh Associates
  • ICC NTA
  • Alliance for National & Community Resilience
  • ICC Community Development
  • American Legal Publishing
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Contact Us
  • Accessibility Policy
qowiPNPp3nm8iYgGC0UEdCo2HWwViS5a76TVBKNPpc4=.html