NBN EN ISO 179-1:2010

Plastics - Determination of Charpy impact properties - Part 1: Non-instrumented impact test (ISO 179-1:2010)

WITHDRAWN

About this standard

Languages
German, English and French
Type
NBN
Standards committee
CEN/TC 249
Status
WITHDRAWN
Publication date
30 July 2010
Replaces
EN ISO 179-1:2000 NBN EN ISO 179-1/A1:2005
Replaced by
NBN EN ISO 179-1:2023
ICS Code
83.080.01 (Plastics in general)
Withdrawn Date
14 June 2023
Price
€ 50,00

About this training

Summary

ISO 179-1:2010 specifies a method for determining the Charpy impact strength of plastics under defined conditions. A number of different types of specimen and test configurations are defined. Different test parameters are specified according to the type of material, the type of test specimen and the type of notch.
The method can be used to investigate the behaviour of specified types of specimen under the impact conditions defined and for estimating the brittleness or toughness of specimens within the limitations inherent in the test conditions. It can also be used for the determination of comparative data from similar types of material.
The method has a greater range of applicability than that given in ISO 180 (Izod impact testing) and is more suitable for the testing of materials showing interlaminar shear fracture or of materials exhibiting surface effects due to environmental factors.
The method is suitable for use with the following range of materials:

rigid thermoplastic moulding and extrusion materials (including filled and reinforced compounds in addition to unfilled types) and rigid thermoplastics sheets
rigid thermosetting moulding materials (including filled and reinforced compounds) and rigid thermosetting sheets (including laminates)
fibre-reinforced thermosetting and thermoplastic composites incorporating unidirectional or multi-directional reinforcements (such as mats, woven fabrics, woven rovings, chopped strands, combination and hybrid reinforcements, rovings and milled fibres) or incorporating sheets made from pre-impregnated materials (prepregs), including filled compounds
thermotropic liquid-crystal polymers.