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- Q1905557 subject Q8845434.
- Q1905557 abstract "The Martindale is a unit for quantifying the abrasion resistance of textiles, especially when used for upholstery.The Martindale method, also known as the Martindale rub test, simulates natural wear of a seat cover, where the textile sample is rubbed against a standard abrasive surface with a specified force. The test equipment works in intervals of 5000 cycles, totalling the wear number (unit: Martindale) of abrasion cycles that leads to the material being worn to a specified degree. The higher the value, the more resistant the material is to abrasion.The national German textile institute specifies a minimum requirement for various applications, and here are some examples:Consoles for use by police or emergency services may require values of 200,000 to 500,000. In the US, the Wyzenbeek test is often used instead of the Martindale.".
- Q1905557 wikiPageExternalLink cmd%3Bjsessionid=B118089AADA14EA746A3979CFEDC040E.4?workflowname=infoInstantdownload&customerid=&docname=9846275&orgdocname=&contextid=beuth&servicerefname=beuth&LoginName=&ixos=toc.
- Q1905557 wikiPageExternalLink martindale-rub-test-upholstery.pdf.
- Q1905557 wikiPageWikiLink Q1123578.
- Q1905557 wikiPageWikiLink Q178512.
- Q1905557 wikiPageWikiLink Q28823.
- Q1905557 wikiPageWikiLink Q3819233.
- Q1905557 wikiPageWikiLink Q8845434.
- Q1905557 comment "The Martindale is a unit for quantifying the abrasion resistance of textiles, especially when used for upholstery.The Martindale method, also known as the Martindale rub test, simulates natural wear of a seat cover, where the textile sample is rubbed against a standard abrasive surface with a specified force. The test equipment works in intervals of 5000 cycles, totalling the wear number (unit: Martindale) of abrasion cycles that leads to the material being worn to a specified degree.".
- Q1905557 label "Martindale (unit)".