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Norm
ÖNORM EN ISO 13732-3
Issue date: 2006 02 01
Ergonomic of the thermal environment - Methods for the assessment of human responses to contact with surfaces - Part 3: Cold surfaces (ISO 13732-3:2005)
This European Standard describes methods for the assessment of the risk of cold injury and other adverse effects
when a cold surface is touched by bare hand/finger skin....
Withdrawn: 2009 02 01
§ Legal References
Publisher:
Austrian Standards International
Format:
Digital | 33 Pages
Language:
German
| English
Currently valid:
This European Standard describes methods for the assessment of the risk of cold injury and other adverse effects
when a cold surface is touched by bare hand/finger skin.
This standard provides ergonomics data to establish temperature limit values for cold solid surfaces. The values
established can be used in the development of special standards, where surface temperature limit values are
required.
The data of this standard will be applicable to all fields where cold solid surfaces cause a risk of acute effects: pain,
numbness and frostbite.
The data are not limited to the hands but apply to human skin in general.
The standard is applicable to the healthy skin of adults (females and males). Considerations on the extension of
applications are given in Annex B.
ÖNORM EN ISO 13732-3
2009 02 01
Ergonomics of the thermal environment - Methods for the assessment of human responses to contact wit...
Norm
ÖNORM EN ISO 13732-3
2006 02 01
Ergonomic of the thermal environment - Methods for the assessment of human responses to contact with...
Norm
↖
Norm
Issue date :
2004 03 01
Safety of machinery - Basic concepts, general principles for design - Part 1: Basic terminology, methodology (ISO 12100-1:2003)
Norm
Issue date :
2009 02 01
Ergonomics of the thermal environment - Methods for the assessment of human responses to contact with surfaces - Part 3: Cold surfaces (ISO 13732-3:2005)
Norm
Issue date :
2005 12 05
Ergonomics of the thermal environment — Methods for the assessment of human responses to contact with surfaces — Part 3: Cold surfaces