Spray-applied fire-resistive material, commonly known as SFRM, is one of the most demanding applications in the spray equipment world. The material is heavy, abrasive, and unforgiving of underpowered or mismatched gear. Choose the wrong pump for the job, and you’ll spend the project fighting plugged lines, inconsistent output, premature wear on consumables, and crews standing around waiting for the equipment to catch up. Choose the right pump, and the work flows. Here’s how to think through the decision before you buy or rent.
Start With the Material
Not all SFRM is the same. The first question every contractor should ask is which specific product the project requires, and then read the manufacturer’s data sheet before looking at any equipment. Cementitious SFRM, gypsum-based SFRM, and intumescent fireproofing each have different density, particle size, and pumping characteristics.
Cementitious products are heavier and more abrasive, demanding higher pressure and more durable stator and rotor combinations. Gypsum-based products are lighter and easier to pump but still require equipment built for the consistency. Intumescent fireproofing behaves more like a thick paint and is typically sprayed with airless or air-assisted equipment rather than a mortar pump. Matching the pump category to the material category is step one.
Match Output to Crew Size
A pump that’s too small for the crew creates idle time. A pump that’s too big creates waste, overspray, and operator fatigue. The right output rate is determined by how fast your nozzle operators can actually apply the material at the required thickness, not by the pump’s rated maximum.
For a single-nozzle crew working on standard structural steel, a pump in the lower output range is usually appropriate. For two-nozzle crews or large open-deck applications, step up to mid-range output. For high-production jobs where multiple nozzlemen are working off the same machine, look at the larger industrial pumps with hopper capacity and continuous-duty motors. The goal is steady flow that keeps the nozzle moving without bogging down or surging.
Pressure Matters More Than You Think
Output rate gets most of the attention, but pressure capability is what determines how far you can pump and how vertical you can go. SFRM applications in tall buildings, parking decks, or sprawling warehouses often require runs of one hundred feet or more, with vertical lifts of several stories.
Underspec the pressure and you’ll struggle to maintain consistent output at the nozzle, especially as the day goes on and the material thickens. Look at the working pressure rating, not just the peak. A pump that can hit high pressure briefly but is rated for continuous duty at a lower number will frustrate you on long runs. When in doubt, size up.
Power Source: Electric, Gas, or Diesel
Indoor jobs almost always require electric pumps because of exhaust and noise restrictions. Outdoor and remote jobs often favor gas or diesel power for portability and independence from site electrical. Some sites mandate one or the other based on environmental rules, so confirm with the GC before committing.
If you’re buying a pump that will work across multiple job types, an electric model with the right amperage requirements is usually the more versatile long-term choice. Just confirm the site has the power available, because a 480-volt pump on a job with only 240-volt service is an expensive mistake.
Hose, Nozzle, and Accessory Compatibility
The pump is only one piece of the system. Hose diameter, length, fitting compatibility, and nozzle setup all affect performance. A high-output pump connected to undersized hose will choke. A long hose run on a smaller-diameter line will lose pressure before the material reaches the nozzle. Standardize your hose, fittings, and nozzles around what the pump is rated to push, and keep spares on every truck.
Wear parts like stators, rotors, and nozzle tips need to match the material being sprayed. Heavier cementitious mixes wear consumables faster, and budgeting for replacement parts is part of the equipment decision, not an afterthought.
Buy, Rent, or Refurbish
For contractors with steady SFRM work year-round, buying makes financial sense within one to two seasons. For occasional fireproofing projects mixed into broader scopes, renting protects cash flow and removes maintenance burden. Refurbished equipment from a trusted dealer often delivers ninety percent of new performance at sixty percent of the cost and can be the smartest play for a growing crew.
Whichever route you choose, work with a supplier who knows the application, stocks the wear parts you’ll need, and offers service support when the pump goes down on a Friday afternoon. That relationship is worth as much as the spec sheet.



























