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Safety Glove Tests & Standards

шоу | 2020.03.22 | Number of clicks:

EN420:2003

EN420 is the general requirements for most protective gloves to ensure that the gloves themselves do not cause any harm to wearer and are comfortable to wear. Tests included in this standard are: sizing, dexterity, pH value, and chrome VI.


EN388:2016

The EN388 sets standards for five types of protection: abrasion resistance, cut resistance, tear resistance, puncture resistance, and impact protection through 6 tests:



Type

Level

Equipment

Measurement

Abrasion Resistance Test

1-4


Abrasion until a hole appears on the material

Cut Resistance, Coup Test

1-5


Knife pass over the material until cut through

Tearing Strength Test

1-4


Tear until the material is apart

Puncture Resistance Test

1-4


Puncture the material until a tip appears

Cut Resistance, TDM TEST ISO 13997

A-F


Add force until cut through at 20mm length

Impact Protection Test

P/NP


TDM test is given when the material dulls the knife during Coup test.


EN511

EN511 sets standards for low temperature protection gloves.


The first figure shows the level of protection against convective cold from 0-4.

The second figure shows the level of protection against contact cold from 0-4.

The third figure shows whether the glove is water penetration after 30 minutes. 1 stands for no water penetration after 30 minutes.


EN407

EN407 is the heat protection standard for protective gloves. 6 numbers stand for 6 types of heat hazard protection level.


Type

Level

Measurement

Flammability

0-4

Material damage after burning

Contact heat

0-4

The rate of temperature rise while contacting with a hot probe

Convective heat

0-4

The rate of temperature rise while contacting with a gas flame

Radiant heat

0-4

The rate of temperature rise while contacting with radiant heat

Small drops of molten metal

0-4

The rate of temperature rise while contacting small drops of molten metal

Large drops of molten metal

0-4

Grams of molten iron needed to damage the PVC film on the back of the glove material.


EN374-1

EN374 gives directives of how to test permeation and degradation by the 18 chemicals that would lead to cracking or holing.

Three specimens are taken from the palm (another three specimens are also taken from the cuff if gloves are longer than 400mm and claimed to provide protection) to test in the following 18 chemical, but not the mixture of any two.


Code letter

Chemical

CAS No.

Class

A

Methanol

67-56-1

Primary alcohol

B

Acetone

67-64-1

Ketone

C

Acetonitrile

1975/5/8

Nitrile compound

D

Dichloromethane

1975/9/2

Chlorinated paraffin

E

Carbon disulphide

75-15-0

Organic compound containing sulphur

F

Toluene

108-88-3

Aromatic hydrocarbon

G

Diethylamine

109-89-7

Amine

H

Tetrahydrofuran

109-99-9

Heterocyclic and ether compound

I

Ethyl acetate

141-78-6

Ester

J

n-heptane

142-82-5

Saturated hydrocarbon

K

40% Sodium hydroxide

1310-73-2

Inorganic base

L

96% Sulphuric acid

7664-93-9

Inorganic mineral acid

M

65% nitric acid

7697-37-2

Inorganic mineral acid

N

99% acetic acid

64-19-7

Organic acid

O

25% ammonium hydroxide

1336-21-6

Organic base

P

30% hydrogen peroxide

7722-84-1

Peroxide

S

40% hydrofluoric acid

7664-39-3

Inorganic mineral acid

T

37% formaldehyde

50-00-0

Aldehyde


Type A gloves have a breakthrough time of 30min or more against minimum 6 test chemicals.

Type B gloves have a breakthrough time of 30min or more against minimum 3 test chemicals.

Type C gloves have a breakthrough time of 10min or more against minimum 1 test chemical.


OEKO - Tex® Standard 100

OEKO - Tex® Standard 100 is a textile tested standard for harmful substances. Testing subjects include prohibited azo dyes, formaldehyde, nickel, chemicals harmful to health, etc. Around 100 test parameters are taken into account. For more information, please vist https://www.oeko-tex.com/en/our-standards/standard-100-by-oeko-tex