Please select and order
€56.10
excl. VAT
Add to cart
Norm

ISO 26101:2017

Issue date: 2017 04 25

Acoustics — Test methods for the qualification of free-field environments

ISO 26101:2017 specifies methodology for qualifying acoustic spaces as anechoic and hemi-anechoic spaces meeting the requirements of a free sound field. ISO 26101:2017 sp...
Withdrawn: 2022 01 13
Publisher:
International Organization for Standardization
Format:
Digital | 22 Pages
Language:
English

ISO 26101:2017 specifies methodology for qualifying acoustic spaces as anechoic and hemi-anechoic spaces meeting the requirements of a free sound field.

ISO 26101:2017 specifies discrete-frequency and broad-band test methods for quantifying the performance of anechoic and hemi-anechoic spaces, defines the qualification procedure for an omni-directional sound source suitable for free-field qualification, gives details of how to present the results and describes uncertainties of measurement.

ISO 26101:2017 has been developed for qualifying anechoic and hemi-anechoic spaces for a variety of acoustical measurement purposes. It is expected that, over time, various standards and test codes will refer to this document in order to qualify an anechoic or hemi-anechoic space for a particular measurement.

In the absence of specific requirements or criteria, Annex A provides qualification criteria and measurement requirements to qualify anechoic and hemi-anechoic spaces for general purpose acoustical measurements.

ISO 26101:2017 describes the divergence loss method for measuring the free sound field performance of an acoustic environment.

ISO 26101-1:2021
2021 05 17
Acoustics — Test methods for the qualification of the acoustic environment — Part 1: Qualification o...
Norm
ISO 26101:2017
2017 04 25
Acoustics — Test methods for the qualification of free-field environments
Norm
ISO 26101:2012
2012 03 09
Acoustics — Test methods for the qualification of free-field environments
Norm
Norm
ISO 26101-1:2021
Issue date : 2021 05 17
Acoustics — Test methods for the qualification of the acoustic environment — Part 1: Qualification of free-field environments