ISO 22762-3:2018

International Standard   Historical · Approved on 27 September 2018

Elastomeric seismic-protection isolators — Part 3: Applications for buildings — Specifications

ISO 22762-3:2018 Files

English 61 Pages
Historical
95.76 OMR

ISO 22762-3:2018 Scope

This document specifies minimum requirements and test methods for elastomeric seismic isolators used for buildings and the rubber material used in the manufacture of such isolators.

It is applicable to elastomeric seismic isolators used to provide buildings with protection from earthquake damage. The isolators covered consist of alternate elastomeric layers and reinforcing steel plates. They are placed between a superstructure and its substructure to provide both flexibility for decoupling structural systems from ground motion, and damping capability to reduce displacement at the isolation interface and the transmission of energy from the ground into the structure at the isolation frequency.

Best Sellers

GSO 150-2:2013
 
Gulf Standard
Expiration dates for food products - Part 2 : Voluntary expiration dates
OS GSO 150-2:2013
GSO 150-2:2013 
Omani Standard
Expiration dates for food products - Part 2 : Voluntary expiration dates
OS GSO 2055-1:2015
GSO 2055-1:2015 
Omani Standard
HALAL FOOD - Part 1 : General Requirements
GSO 2055-1:2015
 
Gulf Technical Regulation
HALAL FOOD - Part 1 : General Requirements

Recently Published

ISO 18777-2:2025
 
International Standard
Transportable liquid oxygen systems for medical use — Part 2: Particular requirements for portable units
ISO/IEC 29110-5-2-1:2025
 
International Standard
Systems and software engineering — Life cycle profiles for very small entities (VSEs) — Part 5-2-1: Organizational management guidelines
ISO/IEC 18047-6:2025
 
International Standard
Information technology — Radio frequency identification device conformance test methods — Part 6: Test methods for air interface communications at 860 MHz to 930 MHz
ISO/TS 4452:2025
 
International Standard
Specification and demonstration of system reliability of single-use drug delivery systems