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Safety headline
Products must pass a battery of rigorous tests conducted by safety agencies before getting a stamp of approval. When you're in a potentially hazardous environment, using a flashlight that carries these approvals is vital.
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We feel that designing a flashlight that's safe to use in volatile situations should not be a feature. It's fundamental. That's why Pelican lighting tools are the most safety approved flashlights on the market.

Innovations like our battery polarity tray makes operating a flashlight impossible if one or more cells are inverted. This also safeguards against dangerous "outgassing" of hydrogen from an accidentally reversed cell. Another industry first is the addition of gas-absorbing pellets to our lamp modules. It is a back-up system that absorbs excess hydrogen retained inside the flashlight. No gas, no spark.

To learn more, click here to jump to the VIDEOS page and watch our short videos, "What Makes a Flashlight Safe?" and "Safety Approval"

HAZARDOUS AREA ELECTRICAL GUIDELINES
  SUBSTANCE

TYPICAL
ENVIRONMENTS

CLASSIFICATION VOLATILITY
CLASS 1 Flammable Gases,
Vapors or Liquids
(Acetylene, Hydrogen,
Ethylene, Propane)

– Oil Refinery –
– Paint Warehouse –
– Offshore Oil Rig –
– Spray Booth –

Division 1
(Hazard Likely)

MOST

LEAST
Division 2
(Hazard Not Likely)
CLASS 2 Combustible Dusts
(Metals [Div.1 only], Coal, Grain)
– Coal Mine –
– Grain Silo –
– Munitions Factory –
– Hay Storage Facility –
Division 1
(Hazard Likely)
Division 2
(Hazard Not Likely)
CLASS 3 Ignitable Fibers & Flyings
(Machined Magnesium)
– Paper Mill –
– Woodworking Facility –
– Textile Mill –
– Cotton Gin –
Division 1
(Hazard Likely)
Division 2
(Hazard Not Likely)

Class 1  diagram
Division 1: Where volatile substances can exist all of the time or some of the time under normal operating conditions.
Division 2: Where volatile substances are not likely to exist under normal operating conditions.