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A technical standard can also be a controlled artifact or similar formal means used for [[calibration]]. Reference Standards and [[certified reference materials]] have an assigned value by direct comparison with a reference base. A [[primary standard]] is usually under the jurisdiction of a national standards body. Secondary, tertiary, check standards and standard materials may be used for reference in a [[metrology]] system. A key requirement in this case is (metrological) [[traceability]], an unbroken paper trail of calibrations back to the primary standard.
A technical standard can also be a controlled artifact or similar formal means used for [[calibration]]. Reference Standards and [[certified reference materials]] have an assigned value by direct comparison with a reference base. A [[primary standard]] is usually under the jurisdiction of a national standards body. Secondary, tertiary, check standards and standard materials may be used for reference in a [[metrology]] system. A key requirement in this case is (metrological) [[traceability]], an unbroken paper trail of calibrations back to the primary standard.


A technical standard may be developed privately or unilaterally, for example by a corporation, regulatory body, military, etc. Standards can also be developed by groups such as trade unions, and trade associations. [[Standards organizations]] often have more diverse input and usually develop voluntary standards: these might become mandatory if adopted by a government, business contract, etc.
A technical standard may be developed privately by an organization such as [[WAVE2M]] or unilaterally, for example by a corporation, regulatory body, military, etc. Standards can also be developed by groups such as trade unions, and trade associations. [[Standards organizations]] often have more diverse input and usually develop voluntary standards: these might become mandatory if adopted by a government, business contract, etc.


The [[standardization]] process may be by edict or may involve the formal consensus<ref>Example of [http://www.tappi.org/s_tappi/doc.asp?CID=107&DID=551843 TAPPI standards development regulations]</ref> of technical experts.
The [[standardization]] process may be by edict or may involve the formal consensus<ref>Example of [http://www.tappi.org/s_tappi/doc.asp?CID=107&DID=551843 TAPPI standards development regulations]</ref> of technical experts.

Revision as of 14:13, 4 May 2012

A technical standard is an established norm or requirement about technical systems. It is usually a formal document that establishes uniform engineering or technical criteria, methods, processes and practices. In contrast, a custom, convention, company product, corporate standard, etc. which becomes generally accepted and dominant is often called a de facto standard.

A technical standard can also be a controlled artifact or similar formal means used for calibration. Reference Standards and certified reference materials have an assigned value by direct comparison with a reference base. A primary standard is usually under the jurisdiction of a national standards body. Secondary, tertiary, check standards and standard materials may be used for reference in a metrology system. A key requirement in this case is (metrological) traceability, an unbroken paper trail of calibrations back to the primary standard.

A technical standard may be developed privately by an organization such as WAVE2M or unilaterally, for example by a corporation, regulatory body, military, etc. Standards can also be developed by groups such as trade unions, and trade associations. Standards organizations often have more diverse input and usually develop voluntary standards: these might become mandatory if adopted by a government, business contract, etc.

The standardization process may be by edict or may involve the formal consensus[1] of technical experts.

Types of standards

The primary types of technical standards are:

  • A standard specification is an explicit set of requirements for an item, material, component, system or service. It is often used to formalize the technical aspects of a procurement agreement or contract. For example, there may be a specification for a turbine blade for a jet engine which defines the exact material and performance requirements.
  • A standard test method describes a definitive procedure which produces a test result. It may involve making a careful personal observation or conducting a highly technical measurement. For example, a physical property of a material is often affected by the precise method of testing: any reference to the property should therefore reference the test method used.
  • A standard practice or procedure gives a set of instructions for performing operations or functions. For example, there are detailed standard operating procedures for operation of a nuclear power plant.
  • A standard guide is general information or options which do not require a specific course of action.
  • A standard definition is formally established terminology.
  • Standard units, in physics and applied mathematics, are commonly accepted measurements of physical quantities.

Availability

  • Public documents available on the internet, public library, etc. (Some technical standards may be found at a major central library or at the library of a good technical university.)
  • Published documents which are available for purchase.
  • Private documents owned by an organization or corporation. These are used and circulated as they determine necessary or useful.
  • Documents open for public use but with intellectual property (copyright, etc.) associated with them.[2]
  • Closed or controlled documents which contain trade secrets or classified information.

Geographic levels

When a geographically defined community needs to solve a community-wide coordination problem, it can adopt an existing standard, or produce a new one.

The main geographic levels are:

National/Regional/International standards is one way of overcoming technical barriers in inter-local or inter-regional commerce caused by differences among technical regulations and standards developed independently and separately by each local, local standards organisation, or local company. Technical barriers arise when different groups come together, each with a large user base, doing some well established thing that between them is mutually incompatible. Establishing national/regional/international standards is one way of preventing or overcoming this problem.

Usage

The existence of a published standard does not imply that it is always useful or correct. For example, if an item complies with a certain standard, there is not necessarily assurance that it is fit for any particular use. The people who use the item or service (engineers, trade unions, etc.) or specify it (building codes, government, industry, etc.) have the responsibility to consider the available standards, specify the correct one, enforce compliance, and use the item correctly. Validation of suitability is necessary.

Standards often get reviewed, revised and updated. It is critical that the most current version of a published standard be used or referenced. The originator or standard writing body often has the current versions listed on its web site.

In social sciences, including economics, a standard is useful if it is a solution to a coordination problem: it emerges from situations in which all parties can realize mutual gains, but only by making mutually consistent decisions. Examples:

Parties Mutual gains Problem Solution
Mechanical industry companies Suppliers interchange, stock gains, etc. Screw thread compatibility Screw thread standard specifications
Pharmaceutical industry and medic community Enable medical prescriptions, suppliers interchange, etc. Drug uniformity Drug standard specifications

References