JIS SCALE
Icom Product Water Resistance
The Japan Industrial Standards (JIS) for water resistance uses a "0" to "8" scale to define the level of water ingress protection built into each product. If the product was tested in compliance with this standard it is usually listed on the product spec sheet. The various JIS classes are defined below.
JIS "0"No special protection
JIS "1"Vertically dripping water shall have no harmful effect (Drip resistant 1)
JIS "2"Dripping water at an angle up to 15 degrees from vertical shall have no harmful effect (Drip resistant 2)
JIS "3"Falling rain at an angle up to 60 degrees from vertical shall have no harmful effect (Rain resistant)
JIS "4"Splashing water from any direction shall have no harmful effect (Splash resistant)
JIS "5"Direct jetting water from any direction shall have no harmful effect (Jet resistant)
JIS "6"Direct jetting water from any direction shall not enter the enclosure (Water tight)
JIS "7"Water shall not enter the enclosure when it is immersed in water under defined conditions (Immersion resistant)
JIS "8"The equipment is usable for continuous submersion in water under specified pressure (Submersible)
Dimensioning standards are standards on how to dimension a working drawing.
The Indian Standards are not available for free download.
There are no standards required "for" ISO 9001-2008, The ISO standards ARE the standards (relating to quality).
The standards agencies responsible for the OSI standards architecture are the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and the International Telecommunications Union-Telecommunications Standards Sector
Knut O. Kverneland has written: 'Metric standards for worldwide manufacturing' -- subject(s): Engineering Standards, Manufactures, Metric system, Standards, Standards, Engineering 'World metric standards for engineering' -- subject(s): Engineering Standards, Metric system, Standards, Engineering
standards the locals adhere to
Production Standards
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By meeting your standards that are personal.
Standards is a plural noun.
In the US, the standards called "General Industry Standards" are the OSHA standards at 29 CFR 1910 and are sometimes called Part 1910.