Gas welding equipment - Air-aspirated hand blowpipes - Specifications and tests (ISO 9012:2023)
This document specifies requirements and test methods for air-aspirated hand blowpipes.
This document applies to blowpipes for brazing, soldering, heating, fusion and other allied thermal
processes which use a fuel gas and aspirated air (injector-type blowpipes) and are intended for manual
use.
This document is applicable to:
— air-aspirated hand blowpipes which are fed with a fuel gas in the gaseous phase, at a controlled
pressure by a regulator, through a gas supply hose;
— air-aspirated hand blowpipes which are fed with a liquefied fuel gas in the gaseous phase at the
container pressure, through a gas supply hose;
— so-called liquid-phase blowpipes which are fed with a fuel gas in the liquid phase, and where thermal
evaporation takes place within the blowpipe.
It does not apply to blowpipes in which the fuel gas leaves the injector in the liquid phase, or to so-called
“cartridge” blowpipes where the gas supply is fixed directly onto the blowpipe and possibly constitutes
the shank.
NOTE Figures 1 to 4 are given for guidance only, to facilitate the explanation of the terms. They do not
specify the construction details, which are left to the discretion of the manufacturer
ΚΩΔΙΚΟΣ ΠΡΟΪΟΝΤΟΣ:
CYS EN ISO 9012:2023
This document specifies requirements and test methods for air-aspirated hand blowpipes.
This document applies to blowpipes for brazing, soldering, heating, fusion and other allied thermal
processes which use a fuel gas and aspirated air (injector-type blowpipes) and are intended for manual
use.
This document is applicable to:
— air-aspirated hand blowpipes which are fed with a fuel gas in the gaseous phase, at a controlled
pressure by a regulator, through a gas supply hose;
— air-aspirated hand blowpipes which are fed with a liquefied fuel gas in the gaseous phase at the
container pressure, through a gas supply hose;
— so-called liquid-phase blowpipes which are fed with a fuel gas in the liquid phase, and where thermal
evaporation takes place within the blowpipe.
It does not apply to blowpipes in which the fuel gas leaves the injector in the liquid phase, or to so-called
“cartridge” blowpipes where the gas supply is fixed directly onto the blowpipe and possibly constitutes
the shank.
NOTE Figures 1 to 4 are given for guidance only, to facilitate the explanation of the terms. They do not
specify the construction details, which are left to the discretion of the manufacturer