To accurately evaluate the ozone aging resistance of materials, ozone aging test chambers have become indispensable testing equipment. Combined with dynamic and static tensile testing, they can fully and authentically reflect the durability of materials under actual working conditions.
Among their key attributes, fog resistance and impact resistance must undergo rigorous laboratory testing—specifically thermal shock tests—to verify true quality and reliability.
In product development, quality control, and reliability testing, temperature humidity (or thermal shock) chambers are vital for simulating environmental conditions.
UV aging test chambers have become essential testing equipment widely used in security product evaluation, and their application has reached a high level of maturity.
However, many still perceive salt spray chambers as merely "corrosion testing" tools—a significant underestimation of their true value and potential applications.
Rain test chambers (also called water spray test chambers or weather resistance testers) replicate natural rainfall conditions in a controlled environment.
At the heart of this test is the salt-spray chamber, yet few operators realize that the diameter of the salt-laden droplets it produces can have a decisive impact on the results.
The Neutral Salt Spray (NSS) test is the go-to laboratory method, but does it really capture what happens out at sea? Below, we break down why NSS falls short and what engineers and researchers should do instead.
temperature chambers are the workhorses of labs, R&D centers, and production lines—but choosing the right one can feel like comparing apples to oranges.
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