The manometer for asbestos abatement that satisfies 29 CFR 1926.1101.
PressurePro produces the continuous, NIST-traceable manometric records required for OSHA Class I asbestos negative pressure enclosure (NPE) compliance — the −0.02 inches of water column the standard demands.
Why a purpose-built manometer for asbestos abatement matters: OSHA is specific.
OSHA 29 CFR 1926.1101 is one of the most prescriptive standards in industrial hygiene. It doesn't suggest pressure differential targets — it mandates them. For Class I asbestos work using negative pressure enclosures, the regulation requires "a minimum of −0.02 column inches of water pressure differential, relative to outside pressure...as evidenced by manometric measurements."
That's not a recommendation. That's a regulatory text citation. And when OSHA inspectors arrive, when project owners audit, or when worker exposure claims arise, the documentation of that −0.02" w.c. is the first record reviewed.
Generic gauges aren't enough. Spot checks aren't enough. Manometric measurements have to be continuous, recorded, and traceable to a recognized calibration standard.
What 29 CFR 1926.1101 says, and what it means for your equipment
OSHA's asbestos construction standard is explicit about pressure monitoring requirements for negative pressure enclosures used in Class I work.
The specified threshold
The standard sets a minimum pressure differential, relative to outside pressure, that must be maintained throughout the period of NPE use. The number is not negotiable.
The required method
"Evidenced by manometric measurements" is regulatory language. The measurement method matters as much as the value being measured.
Continuous, not periodic
"Throughout the period of its use" means continuous monitoring. Spot checks at shift start and end don't satisfy the regulation's intent.
Engineered for Class I NPE documentation that holds up to OSHA.
The asbestos abatement business runs on documentation defensibility. PressurePro produces records that satisfy the regulatory text, in the format inspectors and project owners expect.
- Manometric measurement — the regulation-specified method, in a purpose-built instrument
- Continuous logging — documents pressure throughout the period of NPE use, not at intervals
- NIST-traceable certification — the calibration provenance OSHA inspectors and project owners expect
- 16MB onboard storage — full project records retained on-device for the life of the job
- Onboard thermal printer — print pressure logs for OSHA compliance files and project closeout
- Rugged jobsite case — built for the conditions Class I abatement actually happens in
What OSHA inspectors and project owners actually ask
Citation history shows what trips up Class I abatement contractors. PressurePro answers each question with evidence.
"Show me the manometric records."
PressurePro logs are printed on demand or exported digitally. Time-stamped, continuous, and tied to the specific NPE.
"How is this instrument calibrated?"
NIST-traceable calibration certificate ships with every unit. Defensible to OSHA, EPA, and state regulators.
"Was −0.02" w.c. maintained throughout?"
Continuous logs show actual pressure values across the entire NPE period — not just samples.
"What happened during this breach?"
Excursion data is logged, not hidden. Reviewers prefer documented recovery to silent gaps.
Documentation and standards reference
NIST Traceability Explained
What "NIST-traceable" actually means and why OSHA inspectors expect it for documentation defensibility.
ProductPressurePro Specifications
Complete technical specifications, NIST certification details, and feature documentation.
IndustriesAll Industries We Serve
See how PressurePro fits across containment-critical industries beyond asbestos abatement.
Manometric documentation, to the OSHA standard.
See the PressurePro recorder, find a distributor in your region, or talk to our team about fleet pricing for abatement contractors.