ANSI American Society of Safety Engineers A1264.2-2012 Provision of Slip Resistance on Walking Working Surfaces.pdf
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1、Printed in U.S.A.ASSEAMERICAN SOCIETY OFSAFETY ENGINEERSAMERICAN NATIONAL STANDARDANSI/ASSE A1264.2 2012ANSI/ASSE A1264.2 2012 Provision of Slip Resistanceon Walking/Working SurfacesANSI/ASSE A1264.2 2012The information and materials contained in this publication have been developed from sources bel
2、ieved to be reliable. However, the American Society of Safety Engineers (ASSE) as secretariat of the ANSI accredited A1264 Committee or individual committee members accept no legal responsibility for the correctness or completeness of this material or its application to specific factual situations.
3、By publication of this standard, ASSE or the A1264 Committee does not ensure that adherence to these recommendations will protect the safety or health of any persons, or preserve property. ANSI ANSI/ASSE A1264.2 2012 American National Standard Provision of Slip Resistance on Walking/Working Surfaces
4、 Secretariat American Society of Safety Engineers 1800 East Oakton Street Des Plaines, Illinois 60018-2187 Approved December 19, 2012 American National Standards Institute, Inc. Approval of an American National Standard requires verification by ANSI that the requirements for due process, consensus,
5、and other criteria for approval have been met by the standards developer. Consensus is established when, in the judgment of the ANSI Board of Standards Review, substantial agreement has been reached by directly and materially affected interests. Substantial agreement means much more than a simple ma
6、jority, but not necessarily unanimity. Consensus requires that all views and objections be considered, and that a concerted effort be made toward their resolution. The use of American National Standards is completely voluntary; their existence does not in any respect preclude anyone, whether he/she
7、has approved the standards or not, from manufacturing, marketing, purchasing, or using products, processes, or procedures not conforming to the standards. The American National Standards Institute does not develop standards and will in no circumstance give an interpretation of any American National
8、Standard. Moreover, no person shall have the right or authority to issue an interpretation of an American National Standard in the name of the American National Standards Institute. Requests for interpretation should be addressed to the secretariat or sponsor whose name appears on the title page of
9、this standard. Caution Notice: This American National Standard may be revised or withdrawn at any time. The procedures of the American National Standards Institute require that action be taken periodically to reaffirm, revise, or withdraw this standard. Purchasers of American National Standards may
10、receive current information on all standards by calling or writing the American National Standards Institute. Published February, 2013 by American Society of Safety Engineers 1800 East Oakton Street Des Plaines, Illinois 60018-2187 (847) 699-2929 www.asse.org Copyright 2013 by American Society of Sa
11、fety Engineers All Rights Reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form, in an electronic retrieval system or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Printed in the United States of America American National Standard Foreword (This Foreword is not a pa
12、rt of American National Standard A1264.2 2012.) As an accredited standard developer, ASSE was approved to act as secretariat for the development of the standard. The American National Standard A1264.1-1995: Safety Requirements for Workplace Floor and Wall Openings, Stairs and Railing Systems, as wel
13、l as many regional model-building codes, OSHA regulations and other ANSI standards use the term slip resistance. The perceived need for this standard was to further define the term slip resistance, and to set forth common and accepted practices for providing reasonably safe walking/working surfaces.
14、 A1264.2 has taken a step in addressing this need and formalizing a voluntary consensus standard, which would allow businesses and industry to advance the art of measuring slip resistance on walking/working surfaces, thereby enabling safer workplaces. The scientific investigation of pedestrian safet
15、y, by measuring the frictional resistances of walkway surfaces/materials to obtain data and aid in the formulation of a walkway safety code in the U.S., began in the 1920s by R.B. Hunter under project A-22 of the American Standards Association (now ANSI), with subsequent research study fellowships a
16、t the National Bureau of Standards (now the National Institute for Standards and Technology - NIST). Subsequently, there have been numerous scientific studies of pedestrian safety, and many slip resistance testing devices have been developed. Additional standards and related research initiatives hav
17、e also been undertaken by universities, consensus writing bodies, testing and research facilities, and independent researchers. These studies ultimately produced more questions than answers. However, one common problem was the difficulty in developing an acceptable tribometric device, which would pr
18、oduce valid, reliable and reproducible results in a field setting under both wet and dry conditions. The phenomena of adhesion (involving dry surfaces) and sticktion (involving wet surfaces) are associated with devices that sit on a surface for a period of time before slipping occurs (known as resid
19、ence time or dwell time). Dwell times as short as 0.2 seconds have been known to result in these phenomena. Adhesion and sticktion can result in higher slipmeter readings than would be obtained on the same surface if testing occurs when the test foot and the walkway surfaces make contact with no dwe
20、ll time. This difference is especially evident under wet conditions. Devices that avoid sticktion by applying the horizontal and vertical force components simultaneously (thereby avoiding residence time) make them suitable for testing under wet as well as dry conditions. There are three basic areas
21、addressed in the standard: 1) provisions for reducing hazards; 2) test procedures and equipment; and 3) slip resistance guidelines. The committee is aware of standards activities, which have been in development for many years with regard to test procedures and equipment, and opted to reference those
22、 standards in keeping with the advancements in this area. The E11.2 section of the standard is offered as a guideline, which goes a step beyond that which has previously been considered to be vague and ambiguous. The intent of this standard is to help in the reduction of falls due to conditions, whi
23、ch in some fashion are manageable. The standards committee offers this standard as the state of the art, however continuing developments are to be expected, and revisions of the standard will be necessary as tribometric science progresses. It is felt, however, that guidelines and recommendations are
24、 very much needed and that the standard in its present form provides for the minimum performance requirements necessary for increased safety on walking/working surfaces in the workplace. At the time the ANSI A1264.2 standard was approved as an American National Standard; the A1264 Accredited Standar
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