The manufacturer of the panels used to clad the London tower block where at least 30 people died in a fire this week advised customers against using its polyethylene-cored tiles — the ones reportedly used at Grenfell Tower — in high-rise buildings.

Key points: Panels reportedly used not suitable for high-rise buildings

Panels reportedly used not suitable for high-rise buildings Suitable panels would have cost a few dollars more each

Suitable panels would have cost a few dollars more each British safety codes usually use principles rather than rules

Diagrams of Reynobond tiles from a brochure dated from 2016 shows how polyethylene (PE) core tiles are suitable only for buildings up to 10 metres in height.

"As soon as the building is higher than the firefighters' ladders, it has to be conceived with an incombustible material," the brochure said.

The brochure was issued by French-based Arconic Architectural Products which is responsible for the European marketing of systems produced by US company Arconic, which owns Reynobond.

The Guardian and the BBC have reported panels with a PE core were used in a refurbishment of the 24-storey Grenfell Tower that was completed just last year.

Construction company Rydon Group, which undertook the work, and the local authority which owns Grenfell Tower declined to confirm whether the panels were PE.

Arconic did not respond to requests for comment.

Rydon had earlier said the revamp "met all required building control, fire regulation and health and safety standards".

Other diagrams in the Reynobond brochure show panels with a fire retardant core — the FR model, according to Arconic's website — can be used for buildings of up to 30 metres tall. Above that height, it says, panels with a non-combustible core — the A2 model — should be used.

Grenfell Tower is over 60 metres tall.

Documents submitted in 2015 by the local authority's property division to its planning division seeking approvals for the refurbishment said the concrete and brick building would be clad in Reynobond insulation panels.

Anger is boiling over at protests over the disaster. ( AP: Tim Ireland )

John Cowley, director of Omnis Exteriors, which supplied the padding for the refurbishment but did not install it, told the Guardian the company had been asked to supply the Reynobond PE variant.

It has not been independently confirmed whether the PE panels were ultimately used or whether the use of PE-core panels is legal in Britain.

Fire safety experts say polyethylene is generally avoided in tall buildings as it has been linked to a number of rapidly spreading fires at skyscrapers in Dubai and elsewhere.

"Polyethylene is a thermoplastic material, which … melts and drips as it burns, spreading the fire downwards as well as upwards," architectural consultants Probyn Miers said in a note on insulation materials posted its website.

Witnesses to Wednesday's blaze said the flames spread quickly up the building, which was left a charred shell.

The London Fire Brigade has yet to say what the cause of the fire was.

Vague building codes rely on firms acting in good faith

Building regulations documents did not specifically say PE-core panels should not be used, but three industry experts said that did not mean builders were clearly permitted to use them.

That is because British safety regulations across many industries are usually principles rather than rules-based.

This means the law often requires companies to act safely without giving a specific definition of what this would involve, said Christopher Miers of Probyn Miers.

Firms are instead expected to be able to prove in court that they behaved in a way that their industry would consider safe, given current knowledge and technology.

Reuters