You do realize that this thread dates back to 2008? The only problems with FPE were with their StabLok panels their other gear did not have the same issues I still don’t care for them though.
That's sorta odd. 90% of the HVAC work we did was competitive bid plan and spec, with a large portion of it on public buildings where the state laws make it difficult to exclude a particular brand of equipment as unacceptable for use.
Typical practice in these contracts is that the HVAC contractor furnishes all starters, or combination starters as the case may be, for the equipment he furnishes, with installation and power wiring by the electrical contractor. Equipment to comply with specs listed within the electrical spec section.
By the late 70's, it became very common to refer to the electrical specs on a job and see statements such as " Starters as manufactured by Allen Bradley, Cutler Hammer, or approved equal. Starters by FPE are not acceptable and will not be approved" I find it odd that I've seen that language in more legally binding documents than I can count if FPE actually had no problems with anything but a particular breaker.
To be honest, I've never seen anything from FPE on any job other than the stuff on the hospital job I mentioned, and there was no FPE equipment in any other part of that hospital. Their problems weren't fire or safety related but rather related to mechanical failure rates multiple times higher than what they experienced with either A-B or Square D starters which made up the bulk of what was in the remainder of the facility. Common parts such as contactor blocks or overload relay blocks were available as long as you didn't mind waiting 4 to 6 months to get them. Same parts for A-B, Sq D, C-H, and Westinghouse available locally off the shelf or within a day or two at most. Could be the lack of reasonable parts availability times was the primary reason so many jobs specifically disallowed FPE equipment of any type.
All that said, if I owned a large plant or any other facility with lots of motorized equipment, I'd never allow the installation of a motor control center regardless of brand. Way too expensive up front, and locks you into expensive proprietary parts from a single source for the life of the installation.