I.S. EN 209:2000
Withdrawn
STEEL DRUMS - REMOVABLE HEAD (OPEN HEAD) DRUMS WITH A MINIMUM TOTAL CAPACITY OF 210 L
Hardcopy , PDF
English
04-07-2000
09-20-2010
For Harmonized Standards, check the EU site to confirm that the Standard is cited in the Official Journal.
Only cited Standards give presumption of conformance to New Approach Directives/Regulations.
Foreword
1 Scope
2 Normative references
3 Terms and definitions
4 Dimensions
5 Material
6 Construction
7 Finish
8 Designation
Annex A (normative) Capacity measurement method for
removable head (open head) steel drums
Bibliography
Gives the characteristics and dimensions of removable head (open head) drums, manufactured from steel, having a minimum total capacity of 210 L.
| DocumentType |
Standard
|
| Pages |
12
|
| PublisherName |
National Standards Authority of Ireland
|
| Status |
Withdrawn
|
| Standards | Relationship |
| NEN EN 209 : 2000 | Identical |
| NS EN 209 : 1ED 2000 | Identical |
| NF EN 209 : 2000 | Identical |
| BS EN 209:2000 | Identical |
| EN 209 : 1999 | Identical |
| NBN EN 209 : 2000 | Identical |
| DIN EN 209:2000-02 | Identical |
| UNE-EN 209:2000 | Identical |
| ISO 90-2:1997 | Light gauge metal containers — Definitions and determination of dimensions and capacities — Part 2: General use containers |
| EN 10111:2008 | Continuously hot rolled low carbon steel sheet and strip for cold forming - Technical delivery conditions |
| EN ISO 90-2:1999 | Light gauge metal containers - Definitions and determination of dimensions and capacities - Part 2: General use containers (ISO 90-2:1997) |
| EN 10131:2006 | Cold rolled uncoated and zinc or zinc-nickel electrolytically coated low carbon and high yield strength steel flat products for cold forming - Tolerances on dimensions and shape |
| ISO 668:2013 | Series 1 freight containers — Classification, dimensions and ratings |
| EN 10130:2006 | Cold rolled low carbon steel flat products for cold forming - Technical delivery conditions |
| ISO 228-1:2000 | Pipe threads where pressure-tight joints are not made on the threads — Part 1: Dimensions, tolerances and designation |