Insulating Glass and Safety Glazing
 |
- State-of-the-art, fully automated test equipment.
- Customized test procedures for prototyping and specific industry or application requirements.
- Approved by all major industry programs including IGCC/IGMA, ALI and SGCC.
- Accredited by International Accreditation Services (IAS).
- More than 30 years of testing experience.
- Tests more than 2,000 samples of safety glazing and more than 1,000 insulating glass
units a year.
|
Value of the Testing
Certification of fenestration products ensures their performance and therefore their
widespread use in the building industry. Testing done by the Insulating Glass and
Safety Glazing Department of Architectural Testing, which is accredited by the International
Accreditation Service, provides glass manufacturers the testing needed to qualify
for safety glazing and insulating glass certification programs. Architectural Testing has more than
15 years of experience in these two fields of testing.
For testing insulating glass, we subject the units to environmental exposure to measure their
performance for seal durability, weathering, and volatile fogging. Insulating glass units endure
15 weeks of exposure to extreme temperature variations, ultraviolet radiation, and changes in
humidity. In addition, we have a third test chamber in which ultraviolet radiation and heat are
applied to test for chemical fogging.
In testing safety glazing, we test tempered glass for breakage or fragmentation
size and laminated or organic-coated glass for penetration and film or interlayer
degradation. Technicians place a test sample into an impact frame, and a 100-pound
bag strikes the glass, simulating the energy that a person impacting the glass would
generate.
Innovations in the Testing
As part of our commitment to providing the most comprehensive testing in the marketplace,
we constantly strive to develop new and innovative tests, giving our clients the
ability to improve their products. For example, we are currently updating all of
our insulating glass and safety glazing operations with state-of-the-art equipment.
To provide the highest level of control our insulating glass accelerated weathering and
high humidity chambers are controlled using proprietary software developed and updated by
Architectural Testing. The engineering staff of Architectural Testing can review the daily
performance of the insulating glass chambers at any of our locations. These new chambers
are also double the size of standard insulating glass chambers, giving our labs more capacity
and reducing backlog. For our clients’ convenience, Architectural Testing tests more than 1,000
insulating glass units a year at our labs located in four states—Pennsylvania, Minnesota, Texas,
and California.
Our safety glazing testing is also modernizing with an automated impact system that
doubles the number of tests we can perform daily. In addition, the automated system
also allows for quick changeovers when testing differently sized products. Our automated
system in Pennsylvania alone tests more than 1,500 samples of glass a year. For
our clients’ convenience, we perform safety glazing testing at labs in five states—Pennsylvania,
California, Minnesota, Texas, and Florida.
Insights and Possibilities
Testing for insulating glass units is done according to the following test standards:
- ASTM E 2188 / E 2189 / E 2190
- ASTM E 773 / E 774 / E 1887
Testing of safety glazing is done according to the following test standards:
- CAN/CGSB-12.1-M90 (Canadian)
We can also perform the following specialty testing:
- Non destructive Argon fill level testing
- Field frost point testing
- AAR S-5101 window glazing testing
- High-altitude insulating glass testing (Capillary Tubes)
- Pummel testing for laminated glass
- UL972 burglary resistance
- Witness testing at client’s facility
Insulating Glass/Safety Glazing Links
SGCC—www.sgcc.org
IGCC—igcc.org
IGMA-igmaonline.org
GANA—www.glasswebsite.com
CPSC 16 CFR 1201 Regulation
Back to Top
Learn more about how the Architectural Testing Difference
can help you or Contact Us today.