ISO 21307:2017

International Standard   Current Edition · Approved on 30 November 2017

Plastics pipes and fittings — Butt fusion jointing procedures for polyethylene (PE) piping systems

ISO 21307:2017 Files

English 16 Pages
Current Edition
44.84 BHD

ISO 21307:2017 Scope

ISO 21307:2017 establishes general principles regarding the procedure used in the construction and quality assessment of butt fusion jointing of polyethylene (PE) piping system components specified in accordance with relevant ISO standards. These components are installed in accordance with the relevant codes of practice, national regulations or industry guidance. Specifically, this document specifies three butt fusion jointing procedures for PE pipes and fittings. These are:

- single low-pressure fusion jointing procedure;

- dual low-pressure fusion jointing procedure;

- single high-pressure fusion jointing procedure.

ISO 21307:2017 takes into consideration the materials and components used, the fusion jointing procedure and equipment and the quality assessment of the completed joint. It can be applied in conjunction with appropriate national regulations and standards.

Best Sellers

GSO 150-2:2013
 
Gulf Standard
Expiration dates for food products - Part 2 : Voluntary expiration dates
BH GSO 150-2:2015
GSO 150-2:2013 
Bahraini Standard
Expiration dates for food products - Part 2 : Voluntary expiration dates
BH GSO 2055-1:2016
GSO 2055-1:2015 
Bahraini Technical Regulation
HALAL FOOD - Part 1 : General Requirements
GSO 2055-1:2015
 
Gulf Technical Regulation
HALAL FOOD - Part 1 : General Requirements

Recently Published

ISO/TR 4752:2025
 
International Standard
Biotechnology — Inventory of methods for detection of microbiological contamination in mammalian cell culture
ISO 21043-3:2025
 
International Standard
Forensic sciences — Part 3: Analysis
ISO 19984-2:2025
 
International Standard
Rubber and rubber products — Determination of biobased content — Part 2: Biobased carbon content
ISO/TS 6417:2025
 
International Standard
Microfluidic pumps — Symbols and performance communication