UNE-EN ISO 16283-3:2016
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The latest, up-to-date edition.
Acoustics - Field measurement of sound insulation in buildings and of building elements - Part 3: Façade sound insulation (ISO 16283-3:2016)
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Spanish, Castilian, English
21-09-2016
This part of ISO 16283 specifies procedures to determine the airborne sound insulation of facade elements (element methods) and whole facades (global methods) using sound pressure measurements. These procedures are intended for room volumes in the range from 10 m3 to 250 m3 in the frequency range from 50 Hz to 5 000 Hz. The test results can be used to quantify, assess and compare the airborne sound insulation in unfurnished or furnished rooms where the sound field may, or may not approximate to a diffuse field. The measured airborne sound insulation is frequency-dependent and can be converted into a single number quantity to characterise the acoustic performance using the rating procedures in ISO 717-1.The element methods aim to estimate the sound reduction index of a façade element, for example a window. The most accurate element method uses a loudspeaker as an artificial sound source. Other, less accurate, element methods use available traffic noise. The global methods, on the other hand, aim to estimate the outdoor/indoor sound level difference under actual traffic conditions. The most accurate global methods use the actual traffic as sound source. A loudspeaker may be used as an artificial sound source when there is insufficient level from traffic noise inside the room. An overview of the methods is given in Table 1. The element loudspeaker method yields an apparent sound reduction index which, under certain circumstances can be compared with the sound reduction index measured in laboratories in accordance with ISO 10140. This method is the preferred method when the aim of the measurement is to evaluate the performance of a specified façade element in relation to its performance in the laboratory.The element road traffic method will serve the same purposes as the element loudspeaker method. It is particularly useful when, for different practical reasons, the element loudspeaker method cannot be used. These two methods will often yield slightly different results. The road traffic method tends to result in lower values of the sound reduction index than the loudspeaker method. In Annex D this road traffic method is supplemented by the corresponding aircraft and railway traffic methods.The global road traffic method yields the real reduction of a façade in a given place relative to a position 2 m in front of the façade. This method is the preferred method when the aim of the measurement is to evaluate the performance of a whole façade, including all flanking paths, in a specified position relative to nearby roads. The result cannot be compared with that of laboratory measurements.The global loudspeaker method yields the sound reduction of a façade relative to a position that is 2 m in front of the façade. This method is particularly useful when, for practical reasons, the real source cannot be used, however the result cannot be compared with that of laboratory measurements.
| Committee |
CTN 74/SC 2
|
| DevelopmentNote |
Supersedes UNE EN ISO 140-5 & UNE EN ISO 140-14. (09/2016)
|
| DocumentType |
Standard
|
| Pages |
46
|
| PublisherName |
Asociación Española de Normalización
|
| Status |
Current
|
| Standards | Relationship |
| EN ISO 16283-3:2016 | Identical |
| ISO 16283-3:2016 | Identical |
| IEC 61672-2:2013+AMD1:2017 CSV | Electroacoustics - Sound level meters - Part 2: Pattern evaluation tests |
| IEC 61183:1994 | Electroacoustics - Random-incidence and diffuse-field calibration of sound level meters |
| ISO 3382-2:2008 | Acoustics — Measurement of room acoustic parameters — Part 2: Reverberation time in ordinary rooms |
| IEC 60942:2003 | Electroacoustics - Sound calibrators |
| OIML R 58 : 1998 | SOUND LEVEL METERS |
| OIML R 88 : 1998 | INTEGRATING-AVERAGING SOUND LEVEL METERS |
| ISO 18233:2006 | Acoustics — Application of new measurement methods in building and room acoustics |
| ISO 15712-3:2005 | Building acoustics — Estimation of acoustic performance of buildings from the performance of elements — Part 3: Airborne sound insulation against outdoor sound |
| ISO 717-1:2013 | Acoustics — Rating of sound insulation in buildings and of building elements — Part 1: Airborne sound insulation |
| IEC 61672-3:2013 | Electroacoustics - Sound level meters - Part 3: Periodic tests |
| IEC 61260:1995 | Electroacoustics - Octave-band and fractional-octave-band filters |
| ISO 12999-1:2014 | Acoustics — Determination and application of measurement uncertainties in building acoustics — Part 1: Sound insulation |
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