Mechanical Identification

Rev 1 · Updated Jun 14, 2026 · View history

Build a datasheet from this standard Start a project with this standard already attached — one click, no setup.
Use in a project

1 Scope

1.1This standard governs the materials, content, sizing, installation, and scheduling of identification devices applied to mechanical systems.
NOTE The covered devices are pipe markers, ductwork identification, valve tags with numbered schedules, equipment nameplates, flow-direction arrows, color-coded content banding, and underground warning tape for buried mechanical lines. (1.2)
NOTE Identification under this standard applies to new construction, renovation, and fit-out of mechanical rooms, mechanical chases, above-ceiling and interstitial spaces, and exposed mechanical in tenant spaces. (1.3)
NOTE Piping covered includes both insulated and uninsulated lines carrying HVAC hot water, chilled water, condenser water, steam, condensate, refrigerant, natural gas, fuel oil, glycol, compressed air, and process fluids. (1.4)
NOTE The following scopes are excluded from this standard and are covered by the referenced standards: (1.5)

2 Referenced Standards

2.1Materials and installation shall comply with the latest adopted edition of each of the following unless a specific edition is cited.
2.2Where referenced standards conflict, the more stringent requirement shall govern unless the Engineer of Record directs otherwise in writing.
2.4Where the Owner maintains a facility color standard that supplements or overrides ASME A13.1, the facility standard shall govern.
Standard Title
ASME A13.1-2023 Scheme for the Identification of Piping Systems
ANSI Z535.1-2017 (R2022) Safety Colors
ANSI Z535.4-2011 (R2017) Product Safety Signs and Labels
UL 969 Marking and Labeling Systems
NFPA 70 (Article 409) National Electrical Code (motor and controller marking)
NFPA 13-2022 Standard for the Installation of Sprinkler Systems (Section 16.9)
ASME B31.1-2022 Power Piping
ASME B31.9-2020 Building Services Piping
OSHA 29 CFR 1910.261 Pulp, Paper, and Paperboard Mills (Appendix B, Piping Color Code)
SMACNA HVAC Duct Construction Standards — Metal and Flexible, 3rd Edition

3 Submittals

3.1Action Submittals
3.1.1The Contractor shall submit the following action submittals for review before fabrication or procurement of identification devices:
  • Product data for each pipe marker, valve tag, nameplate, arrow strip, and warning tape type, including material, color, letter height, and temperature rating.
  • A project-specific color schedule correlating each piping service to its band color, legend text, and ASME A13.1 hazard category or the Owner-approved facility color, confirmed with the Owner before procurement.
  • Samples of each identification device type, including one pipe marker at the largest project pipe size, one valve tag, and one equipment nameplate.
  • Schedule of equipment nameplates listing each tagged item, its designation, and the engraved legend, submitted with adequate lead time for custom fabrication.
Action Submittalscheckbox
Product data for each identification device
Project-specific color schedule
Samples of each device type
Equipment nameplate schedule
3.2Closeout Submittals
3.2.1The Contractor shall submit the following closeout submittals at project completion:
  • The valve tag schedule correlating each numbered tag to its valve service, location, and normal operating position, furnished as a contractor deliverable.
  • A copy of the as-installed color schedule reflecting any field-approved deviations.
  • Maintenance data describing replacement marker and tag stock and recommended re-marking practice.
Closeout Submittalscheckbox
Valve tag schedule (correlated)
As-installed color schedule
Maintenance and replacement data
NOTE The valve tag schedule is a contractor-furnished deliverable; numbered tags installed without a correlated schedule deliver no operational value and are a common turnover defect. (3.3)

4 Quality Assurance

4.1Identification devices shall be the product of a single manufacturer for each device category to maintain color, gloss, and legend consistency across the project.
4.2Adhesive label and marker stock shall be evaluated to UL 969 for adhesion, ultraviolet resistance, chemical resistance, and temperature resistance.
4.3Equipment nameplates and warning labels shall meet the durability, contrast, and legibility requirements of ANSI Z535.4.
NOTE Field-applied installers shall confirm pipe outside diameter including insulation before selecting marker size, because marker selection by nominal pipe size rather than insulated outside diameter is the most frequent submittal rejection. (4.4)
4.5The color classification system shall be resolved with the Owner and documented in the project color schedule before any identification device is procured.
NOTE Adopting the contractor's stock color scheme by default — rather than confirming the Owner facility standard first — generates field RFIs and re-work after installation; the color schedule is a pre-procurement decision. (4.6)

5 Environmental and Service Conditions

NOTE Standard vinyl pipe markers are rated for continuous service to approximately 220°F (104°C); lines operating above this temperature require heat-resistant polyester markers or engraved metal tags. (5.1)
5.2Markers for refrigerant suction lines and chilled-water lines operating below the surrounding dew point shall be snap-on or otherwise mechanically attached, not adhesive-backed.
NOTE Adhesive-backed vinyl will not bond to a condensation-wet or sub-40°F surface and detaches within weeks of commissioning. (5.3)
5.4Markers on cold or below-dew-point surfaces shall be mechanically attached, not adhesive-backed.
5.5Valve tags and nameplates in exterior, wet, or chemically aggressive locations shall be stainless steel; brass or aluminum tags are limited to interior, non-corrosive environments.
5.6Markers, tags, and nameplates installed on insulated surfaces shall be applied after the insulation jacket is complete, coordinated with Mechanical Insulation.
NOTE When markers are applied before insulation they are buried; either the insulation contractor leaves marking windows or the piping contractor returns for final marking after jacketing. (5.7)
5.8Marking-window or return-to-mark coordination shall be established between the piping and insulation contractors before insulation begins.

5.9 Pipe Marker Materials and Sizing

5.9.1Pipe markers shall be selected by pipe outside diameter including insulation, not by nominal pipe size.
5.9.2Legend letter height shall meet ASME A13.1 Table 4.2-1 for the marked outside diameter as scheduled below.
NOTE ASME A13.1 sets minimum letter height by outside diameter so legends remain legible at the viewing distance typical for that pipe size; the larger the pipe, the farther away it is normally read. (5.9.3)
Legend letter height (by pipe OD including insulation)select
OD under 0.5 in. — 0.375 in. min letters
OD 0.5 to 1.25 in. — 0.5 in. min letters
OD 1.5 to 2 in. — 0.75 in. min letters
OD 2.5 to 6 in. — 1.25 in. min letters
OD 8 to 10 in. — 2.5 in. min letters
OD over 10 in. — 3.5 in. min letters
5.9.4The color band at each end of a marker shall be at least as long as the printed legend field.
NOTE For the 2.5 to 6 in. outside-diameter range typical of most HVAC piping, the default marker is an 8 in. label with a 2 in. color band at each end. (5.9.5)
Pipe marker typeradio
Wrap-around self-adhesive vinyl
Snap-on rigid PVC (clip-mount)
Wrap-around rigid PVC (self-coiling)
Heat-resistant polyester
NOTE Wrap-around self-adhesive vinyl is the default for interior, conditioned mechanical rooms; snap-on PVC is the default for refrigeration and cold lines where adhesive bonding below 40°F is unreliable. (5.9.6)
Marker legend text sourceradio
Pre-printed standard legend
Custom-printed legend (project-specific text)

5.10 Color Classification

5.10.1Each piping service shall be assigned a band color, legend text, and hazard category in the project color schedule before procurement.
NOTE ASME A13.1 defines six predefined color combinations for hazard classes plus user-defined combinations for services it does not enumerate; the predefined classes cover flammable, fire-quenching, toxic/corrosive, combustible, and water services, with other services assigned from the user-defined set. (5.10.2)
Color classification systemradio
ASME A13.1 predefined six-category scheme
Owner facility custom color scheme
ASME A13.1 supplemented by Owner facility colors
Hazard color assignment (ASME A13.1 predefined classes)checkbox
Flammable / combustible / oxidizing — yellow field, black legend
Fire-quenching — red field, white legend
Toxic / corrosive — orange field, black legend
Potable / cooling / boiler-feed water — green field, white legend
Compressed air — blue field, white legend
User-defined (other) — assign per color schedule
5.10.3Where the Owner facility color code conflicts with an ASME A13.1 predefined category, the deviation shall be documented in the project color schedule.
NOTE An undocumented facility-color deviation confuses outside maintenance contractors and fire marshal inspectors who read the piping against the ASME convention; documenting the deviation in the schedule resolves the ambiguity. (5.10.4)

5.11 Flow Direction Arrows

5.11.1Flow-direction arrows shall be provided at every pipe marker location, either integral to the marker or as separate adhesive arrow strips.
5.11.2Reversible and two-pipe changeover systems — including condenser water and changeover hydronic loops — shall be marked with arrows in both directions.
NOTE Without flow arrows on a changeover system, an operator cannot determine flow direction after a seasonal switchover; both-direction marking preserves that information through the changeover. (5.11.3)
Flow arrow provisionradio
Integral to pipe marker
Separate adhesive arrow strips
Both-direction arrows (reversible systems)

6 Valve Tags

6.1Each valve serving a mechanical system, other than valves at terminal devices integral to a piece of equipment, shall receive a numbered tag.
6.2Valve tags shall be round, 1-1/2 in. minimum diameter, with stamped sequential numbers and a chain or S-hook attachment.
NOTE The 80%-case valve tag is a polished brass round tag, 1-1/2 in. diameter, 19-gauge minimum, with a brass ball-chain attachment. (6.3)
Valve tag materialradio
Brass (19-gauge, interior non-corrosive)
Stainless steel (exterior or chemical exposure)
Aluminum (interior, non-critical, cost-reduction)
Valve tag sizeselect
1-1/2 in. diameter (round)
2 in. diameter (round)
Rectangular (per facility standard)
Valve tag attachmentradio
Brass ball-chain (#3 or
Stainless wire / S-hook

6.4 Valve Tag Schedule

6.4.1The Contractor shall develop and furnish a valve tag schedule correlating each tag number to its valve service, location, and normal operating position.
6.4.2The schedule shall be bound in the operation and maintenance manual and a laminated copy shall be posted in the mechanical room.
NOTE A numbered-only tag carries no meaning without its schedule; binding the schedule in the O&M manual and posting a laminated copy in the mechanical room keeps it available to maintenance staff at the equipment. (6.4.3)
Valve tag legend formatradio
Number only (correlated to bound schedule)
Number plus engraved service name
Valve tag schedule locationcheckbox
Bound in O&M manual
Laminated copy posted in mechanical room
NOTE A sample valve tag schedule format is shown below; the Contractor shall complete one row per tagged valve. (6.4.4)
Tag No. Service Location Normal Position
CHW-001 Chilled water supply isolation Mech Rm 101, AHU-1 Open
HHW-014 Hot water return balancing 3rd flr ceiling, grid C-4 Throttled
CW-006 Condenser water isolation Penthouse, CT-1 Open

7 Equipment Nameplates

7.1Field-mounted mechanical equipment — air handling units, pumps, fans, heat exchangers, boilers, chillers, cooling towers, and similar — shall receive an engraved nameplate bearing the equipment designation.
Equipment nameplate materialradio
Laminated phenolic (engraved, two-ply)
Anodized aluminum (engraved)
Stainless steel (laser-engraved, high-temp/exterior)
Nameplate letter heightselect
1/2 in. (minimum)
3/4 in. (mechanical-room equipment)
1 in. (large plant equipment)
Nameplate legend contentcheckbox
Equipment designation (tag)
Service or area served
Source/return reference (e.g., "fed from MCC-2")
NOTE Custom-engraved phenolic nameplates carry a 3 to 4 week fabrication lead time; the nameplate schedule shall be issued to the fabricator early enough to avoid a closeout schedule risk. (7.4)
NOTE Motor and motor-controller nameplate marking, where specified alongside mechanical equipment, shall conform to NFPA 70 Article 409 and is coordinated with Equipment Labeling. (7.5)

8 Ductwork Identification

8.1Ductwork serving supply, return, exhaust, and outside-air systems shall be identified with the system designation and a flow-direction arrow.
NOTE Ductwork identification has no binding national standard equivalent to ASME A13.1; SMACNA is advisory and the governing requirements flow from the Owner design guide or base building specification. (8.2)
8.3Legend letter height shall be 2 in. minimum on duct 12 in. and larger and 1 in. minimum on duct under 12 in.
8.4Flow-direction arrows shall be placed on rectangular and round duct following SMACNA conventions at each labeled location.
Ductwork identification methodradio
Stencil lettering
Pre-printed adhesive markers
Self-adhesive printed labels
Ductwork label letter heightselect
1 in. (duct under 12 in.)
2 in. (duct 12 in. and larger)
Insulated ductwork markingradio
Markers on completed insulation jacket
Markers on uninsulated sections only
8.5Final air-system identification shall incorporate TAB-confirmed values, not design values.
8.6Final air-system identification shall be coordinated with the TAB contractor before markers are installed Testing Adjusting And Balancing.
NOTE The balancing contractor marks terminal units and diffusers with confirmed airflow; identification developed from design values can disagree with the balanced result, so final marking is coordinated to the TAB-confirmed CFM. (8.7)

9 Underground Piping Identification

9.1Buried mechanical piping shall be identified with detectable polyethylene warning tape installed 12 in. minimum above the pipe crown, in addition to surface markers at grade-access points.
9.2Warning tape shall include a metallic tracer to permit location of non-metallic buried lines.
NOTE Detectable tape color and legend shall follow the APWA color code for the buried service. (9.3)
Underground warning tape service color (APWA)select
Yellow — gas, oil, flammable
Green — sanitary sewer / drainage
Blue — potable water
Orange — communications
Red — electric
Warning tape widthradio
3 in.
6 in.
Warning tape burial depth above pipe crownrange
in.
1236

10 Installation

10.1Markers, tags, and nameplates shall be applied to clean, dry, completed surfaces only.
10.2Pipe markers shall be installed at every valve, at each branch takeoff, at each change in direction, at each access panel, on both sides of every wall, floor, and ceiling penetration, and at maximum 25 ft intervals on straight runs.
NOTE ASME A13.1 recommends marking at all fittings, penetrations, and direction changes plus a 25 ft maximum interval so a reader encounters identification within a short distance anywhere on a run; an authority or Owner may require a shorter interval. (10.3)
10.4Pipe markers shall be installed above all accessible ceilings and in ceiling plenums wherever piping is accessible, not only in mechanical rooms.
NOTE Limiting identification to mechanical rooms is a common omission; piping above accessible ceilings and in interstitial spaces is serviced by maintenance staff and shall be marked there as well. (10.5)
10.6Markers shall be oriented so the legend is readable from the normal point of approach, with the legend on the lower half of pipe viewed from below and on the upper half of pipe viewed from above.
10.7Valve tags shall be attached so the tag hangs free and the number is readable without removing adjacent insulation or components.
Pipe marker spacing on straight runsrange
ft
1025
Marker placement locationscheckbox
At each valve and branch takeoff
At each change in direction
Both sides of wall/floor/ceiling penetrations
At each access panel
Above accessible ceilings and in plenums
At maximum 25 ft on straight runs
10.8Identification device routing, equipment locations, and the extent of marked areas shall be installed as shown mechanical identification plan.

11 Delivery, Storage, and Handling

11.1Identification devices shall be delivered in the manufacturer's original packaging with legends and colors protected from abrasion and ultraviolet exposure.
11.2Adhesive markers and labels shall be stored within the manufacturer's specified temperature and humidity range until installation to preserve adhesive performance.
NOTE Custom-engraved nameplates and tags shall be checked against the approved schedule on receipt and any discrepancy resolved before installation. (11.3)

12 Warranty

12.1Identification devices shall be warranted against fading, cracking, delamination, and loss of adhesion for a period not less than that of the base mechanical work.
12.2Markers that delaminate or detach within the warranty period shall be replaced at no cost, with attention to whether mechanical attachment is required at the affected location.
NOTE A pattern of adhesive marker loss on cold or below-dew-point surfaces indicates a wrong device selection rather than a defect, and the correction is mechanical attachment, not re-adhesion. (12.3)

13 Spare Parts

13.1The Contractor shall furnish replacement stock of each pipe marker, valve tag, and nameplate type used on the project for Owner re-marking after maintenance.
13.1.1The Contractor shall furnish the following spare identification stock at closeout:
  • Replacement pipe markers for the most common project services, in the project sizes.
  • Blank valve tags with attachment hardware matching the installed type.
  • The color schedule and valve tag schedule in editable form for future additions.
Spare identification stockcheckbox
Replacement pipe markers (common services)
Blank valve tags with attachment hardware
Editable color and valve tag schedules

Edit this page

SynC Standards are reference material provided for informational purposes only and as a guide. They are not engineering, architectural, or legal advice and are not a substitute for the judgment of a licensed design professional. It is the responsibility of the user to determine the applicability of any standard to a specific project and to verify all requirements against the governing codes, manufacturer data, and project conditions. SynC does not render professional services and forms no professional relationship by publishing this content. Provided "as is," without warranty of any kind, including fitness for a particular purpose. See our Terms of Use for the complete terms.

This standard is published by SynC and licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0. You may share and adapt it, including commercially, provided you give credit, link to the license, indicate any changes, and license your adaptations under the same terms. Keep the attribution and notice below with any copy — it includes the warranty disclaimer the license requires you to retain.

Attribution & reuse notice — keep this with any copy:
"Mechanical Identification." SynC Standards. Licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Source: https://synergyinconstruction.com/wiki/sync/mechanical-identification — reference material only; not professional engineering advice and provided without warranty. Verify against governing codes and have a licensed professional review before use.