S.R. CEN TS 15945:2011
Withdrawn
View Superseded by
PACKAGING - EASE OF OPENING - CRITERIA AND TEST METHODS FOR EVALUATING CONSUMER PACKAGING
Hardcopy , PDF
English
03-31-2011
03-31-2019
Foreword
Introduction
1 Scope
2 Normative references
3 Terms and definitions
4 Criteria for ease of opening of packaging
5 Test methods
Annex A (normative) - Consumer panel test for
ease of opening
Bibliography
Defines the following for all adult consumers: - criteria for ease of opening of packages; - methods for evaluating the ease of opening of consumer packages.
| DocumentType |
Standard
|
| Pages |
19
|
| PublisherName |
National Standards Authority of Ireland
|
| Status |
Withdrawn
|
| SupersededBy |
| Standards | Relationship |
| CEN/TS 15945:2011 | Identical |
| DD CEN/TS 15945:2011 | Equivalent |
| ISO 9241-11:1998 | Ergonomic requirements for office work with visual display terminals (VDTs) — Part 11: Guidance on usability |
| EN 14375:2016 | Child-resistant non-reclosable packaging for pharmaceutical products - Requirements and testing |
| EN ISO 9241-11:1998 | Ergonomic requirements for office work with visual display terminals (VDTs) - Part 11: Guidance on usability (ISO 9241-11:1998) |
| CEN/CLC Guide 6:2014 | Guide for addressing accessibility in standards |
| EN ISO 8317:2015 | Child-resistant packaging - Requirements and testing procedures for reclosable packages (ISO 8317:2015) |
| ISO 21067:2007 | Packaging — Vocabulary |
| ISO 8317:2015 | Child-resistant packaging — Requirements and testing procedures for reclosable packages |
| ISO/TS 20282-2:2013 | Usability of consumer products and products for public use — Part 2: Summative test method |
| ISO 20282-1:2006 | Ease of operation of everyday products — Part 1: Design requirements for context of use and user characteristics |
| EN 862:2016 | Packaging - Child-resistant packaging - Requirements and testing procedures for non-reclosable packages for non-pharmaceutical products |
| ISO/TR 16982:2002 | Ergonomics of human-system interaction — Usability methods supporting human-centred design |