Variation between manufacturers’ declared vibration emission values and those measured under simulated workplace conditions for a range of hand-held power tools typically found in the construction industry
posted on 2010-12-06, 15:17authored byAndrew N. Rimell, Luca Notini, Neil Mansfield, Derek Edwards
Tool manufacturers are required to declare the vibration emission of their hand-held power
tools in order to sell them within Europe. To enable comparison between different
manufacturers, tests are carried out in accordance with the relevant test code (such as those
defined in the ISO 8662 and EN 60745 series). These tests may be carried out in artificial
circumstances which do not necessarily correctly predict the vibration emission that would be
obtained in the workplace and often underestimate the magnitude of the vibration. In practice,
tools are used with a range of inserted tools on different materials, resulting in a range of
vibration emission values for a given tool. CEN Technical Report, CEN/TR 15350 provides
multiplication factors to enable an estimate of the workplace vibration emission to be obtained
from the manufacturers’ data. This paper compares the manufacturers’ declared vibration emission values with those
measured for the public-domain OPERC HAVTEC database. The OPERC measurements have
been made according to ISO 5349 using simulated workplace conditions, with a range of
inserted tools for each machine tested. A total of 656 tool/attachment combinations are
presented from 105 different tool models, covering a wide range of applications typically found
within the construction industry. The measured data is compared with the manufacturers
declared emission value, with and without the multiplication factors given in CEN/TR 15350.
It was found that, in general, the manufacturers’ declared values underestimated the workplace
vibration emission, whereas the multiplication factors given in CEN/TR 15350 overestimated
the workplace vibration emission.
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RIMMELL, A.N. ... et al, 2007. Variation between manufacturers’ declared vibration emission values and those measured under simulated workplace conditions for a range of hand-held power tools typically found in the construction industry. International Journal of Industrial Ergonomics, 38 (9-10), pp. 661–675.