ISO 252:2023

International Standard   Current Edition · Approved on 02 March 2023

Conveyor belts — Adhesion between constitutive elements — Test methods

ISO 252:2023 Files

English 6 Pages
Current Edition
19.15 OMR

ISO 252:2023 Scope

This document specifies two test methods, A and B, for determining the adhesion strength between constitutive elements of a conveyor belt, i.e. between plies and between covers and carcass. Basic test conditions are in conformity with ISO 36.

It is applicable to all types of construction of conveyor belting with the exception of belts containing steel cord reinforcement, and textile-reinforced belts with a full-thickness tensile strength of less than 160 N/mm. It is not suitable or valid for light conveyor belts as described in ISO 21183-1[1].

NOTE          Methods A and B are alternative options, but the mean adhesive force values calculated for the two methods can be different. Also, as both methods might not be equally suitable for all belt constructions, it is advisable that the advice of the belt manufacturer be sought.

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 7718-2:2025
 
International Standard
Aircraft — Passenger doors interface requirements for connection of passenger boarding bridge or passenger transfer vehicle — Part 2: Upper deck doors
ISO/IEC/IEEE 32430:2025
 
International Standard
Software engineering — Software non-functional size measurement
ISO 10218-1:2025
 
International Standard
Robotics — Safety requirements — Part 1: Industrial robots
ISO 10218-2:2025
 
International Standard
Robotics — Safety requirements — Part 2: Industrial robot applications and robot cells