• There are no items in your cart

ISO 19004:2004

Withdrawn

Withdrawn

A Withdrawn Standard is one, which is removed from sale, and its unique number can no longer be used. The Standard can be withdrawn and not replaced, or it can be withdrawn and replaced by a Standard with a different number.

Rubber and rubber products Determination of the sensitivity of test methods

Available format(s)

Hardcopy , PDF , PDF 3 Users , PDF 5 Users , PDF 9 Users

Withdrawn date

13-03-2019

Language(s)

English, French

Published date

24-09-2004

€60.00
Excluding VAT

ISO 19004:2004 describes how test sensitivity can be determined for test methods used to measure typical physical and chemical properties of rubber and rubber products. It is also applicable to tests used to measure the properties of carbon black fillers.

Test sensitivity is defined as the ratio of the discrimination power of a test method for the fundamental property to be determined to the measurement error expressed as a standard deviation. It is frequently described as the 'signal-to-noise ratio'.

The standard does not address the topic of sensitivity in the context of threshold (i.e. minimum) detection limits in the determination of very low or trace constituent levels.

ISO 19004:2004 is based, with permission of ASTM, on ASTM D 6600-00, Standard Practice for Evaluating Test Sensitivity for Rubber Test Methods, copyright ASTM.

DevelopmentNote
Supersedes ISO/DIS 19004 (09/2004)
DocumentType
Standard
Pages
30
PublisherName
International Organization for Standardization
Status
Withdrawn

Standards Relationship
NEN ISO 19004 : 2004 Identical
NF ISO 19004 : 2006 Identical

ISO/TR 9272:2005 Rubber and rubber products Determination of precision for test method standards

Access your standards online with a subscription

Features

  • Simple online access to standards, technical information and regulations.

  • Critical updates of standards and customisable alerts and notifications.

  • Multi-user online standards collection: secure, flexible and cost effective.