History
BSI Group began in 1901 as the ''Engineering Standards Committee'', led byBritish Standards creation
The BSI Group as a whole does not produce British Standards, as standards work within the BSI is decentralized. The governing board of BSI establishes a Standards Board. The Standards Board does little apart from setting up sector boards (a sector in BSI parlance being a field of standardization such as ICT, quality, agriculture, manufacturing, or fire). Each sector board, in turn, constitutes several technical committees. It is the technical committees that, formally, approve a British Standard, which is then presented to the secretary of the supervisory sector board for endorsement of the fact that the technical committee has indeed completed a task for which it was constituted.Standards
The standards produced are titled British Standard XXXX PYYYY where XXXX is the number of the standard, P is the number of the part of the standard (where the standard is split into multiple parts) and YYYY is the year in which the standard came into effect. BSI Group currently has over 27,000 active standards. Products are commonly specified as meeting a particular British Standard, and in general, this can be done without any certification or independent testing. The standard simply provides a shorthand way of claiming that certain specifications are met, while encouraging manufacturers to adhere to a common method for such a specification. TheStatus of standards
Standards are continuously reviewed and developed and are periodically allocated one or more of the following status keywords. *Confirmed - the standard has been reviewed and confirmed as being current. *Current - the document is the current, most recently published one available. *Draft for public comment/DPC - a national stage in the development of a standard, where wider consultation is sought within the UK. *Obsolescent - indicating by amendment that the standard is not recommended for use for new equipment, but needs to be retained to provide for the servicing of equipment that is expected to have a long working life, or due to legislative issues. *Partially replaced - the standard has been partially replaced by one or more other standards. *Proposed for confirmation - the standard is being reviewed and it has been proposed that it is confirmed as the current standard. *Proposed for obsolescence - the standard is being reviewed and it has been proposed that it is made obsolescent. *Proposed for withdrawal - the standard is being reviewed and it has been proposed that it is withdrawn. *Revised - the standard has been revised. *Superseded - the standard has been replaced by one or more other standards. *Under review - the standard is under review. *Withdrawn - the document is no longer current and has been withdrawn. *Work in hand - there is work being undertaken on the standard and there may be a related draft for public comment available.Examples
*BS 0 ''A standard for standards'' specifies development, structure and drafting of standards. *BS 1 Lists of rolled sections for structural purposes *BS 2 Specification and sections of tramway rails and fishplates *BS 3 Report on influence of gauge length and section of test bar on the percentage of elongation *BS 4 Specification for structural steel sections *BS 5 Report on locomotives for Indian railways *BS 7 Dimensions of copper conductors insulated annealled, for electric power and light *BS 9 Specifications for Bull Head railway rails *BS 11 Specifications and sections of Flat Bottom railway rails *BS 12 Specification for Portland Cement *BS 15 Specification for structural steel for bridges, etc., and general building construction *BS 16 Specification for telegraph material (insulators, pole fittings, et cetera) *BS 17 Interim report on electrical machinery *BS 22 Report on effect of temperature on insulating materials *BS 24 Specifications for material used in the construction of standards for railway rolling stock *BS 26 Second report on locomotives for Indian Railways (Superseding No 5) *BS 27 Report on standard systems of limit gauges for running fits *BS 28 Report on nuts, bolt heads and spanners *BS 31 Specification for steel conduits for electrical wiring *BS 32 Specification for steel bars for use in automatic machines *BS 33 Carbon filament electric lamps *BS 34 Tables of BS Whitworth, BS Fine and BS Pipe Threads *BS 35 Specification for Copper Alloy Bars for use in Automatic Machines *BS 36 Report on British Standards for Electrical Machinery *BS 37 Specification for Electricity Meters *BS 38 Report on British Standards Systems for Limit Gauges for Screw Threads *BS 42 Report on reciprocating steam engines for electrical purposes *BS 43 Specification for charcoal iron lip-welded boiler tubes *BS 45 Report on Dimensions for Sparking Plugs (for Internal Combustion Engines) *BS 47 Steel Fishplates for Bullhead and Flat Bottom Railway Rails, Specification and Sections of *BS 49 Specification for Ammetres and Voltmetres *BS 50 Third Report on Locomotives for Indian Railways (Superseding No. 5 and 26) *BS 53 Specification for Cold Drawn Weldless Steel Boiler Tubes for Locomotive Boilers *BS 54 Report on Screw Threads, Nuts and Bolt Heads for use in Automobile Construction *BS 56 Definitions of Yield Point and Elastic Limit *BS 57 Report on heads for Small Screws *BS 70 Report on Pneumatic Tyre Rims for automobiles, motorcycles and bicycles *BS 72 British Standardisation Rules for Electrical Machinery, * BS 73 Specification for Two-Pin Wall Plugs and Sockets (Five-, Fifteen- and Thirty-Ampere) *BS 76 Report of and Specifications for Tar and Pitch for Road Purposes *BS 77 Specification. Voltages for a.c. transmission and distribution systems *BS 80 Magnetos for automobile purposes *BS 81 Specification for Instrument Transformers *BS 82 Specification for Starters for Electric Motors *BS 84 Report on Screw Threads (British Standard Fine), and their Tolerances (Superseding parts of Reports Nos. 20 and 33) *BS 86 Report on Dimensions of Magnetos for Aircraft Purposes *BS 153 Specification for Steel Girder Bridges *BS 308 a now deleted standard for engineering drawing conventions, having been absorbed into BS 8888. * BS 317 for Hand-Shield and Side Entry Pattern Three-Pin Wall Plugs and Sockets (Two Pin and Earth Type) *BS 336 for fire hose couplings and ancillary equipment * BS 372 for Side-entry wall plugs and sockets for domestic purposes (Part 1 superseded BS 73 and Part 2 superseded BS 317) *BS 381 for colours used in identification, coding and other special purposes *BS 476 for fire resistance of building materials/elements *BS 499 Welding terms and symbols. * BS 546 for Two-pole and earthing-pin plugs, socket-outlets and socket-outlet adaptors for AC (50–60 Hz) circuits up to 250V * BS 857 for safety glass for land transport *BS 970 Specification for wrought steels for mechanical and allied engineering purposes *BS 987C Camouflage Colours *BS 1011 Recommendation for welding of metallic materials * BS 1088 for marine plywood * BS 1192 for ''Construction Drawing Practice''. Part 5 (BS1192-5:1998) concerns ''Guide for structuring and exchange of CAD data''. *BS 1361 for cartridge fuses for a.c. circuits in domestic and similar premises * BS 1362 for cartridge fuses for BS 1363 power plugs * BS 1363 for mains power plugs and sockets *BS 1377 Methods of test for soils for civil engineering. *BS 1572 Colours for Flat Finishes for Wall Decoration *BS 1881 Testing Concrete *PAS documents
BSI also publishes a series of Publicly Available Specification (PAS) documents. PAS documents are a flexible and rapid standards development model open to all organizations. A PAS is a sponsored piece of work allowing organizations flexibility in the rapid creation of a standard while also allowing for a greater degree of control over the document's development. A typical development time frame for a PAS is around six to nine months. Once published by BSI, a PAS has all the functionality of a British Standard for the purposes of creating schemes such as management systems and product benchmarks as well as codes of practice. A PAS is a living document and after two years the document will be reviewed and a decision made with the client as to whether or not this should be taken forward to become a formal standard. The term PAS was originally an abbreviation for "product approval specification", a name which was subsequently changed to “publicly available specification”. However, according to BSI, not all PAS documents are structured as specifications and the term is now sufficiently well established not to require any further amplification.Examples
* PAS 78: Guide to good practice in commissioning accessible websites * PAS 440: Responsible Innovation – Guide * PAS 9017: Plastics – Biodegradation of polyolefins in an open-air terrestrial environment – Specification * PAS 1881: Assuring safety for automated vehicle trials and testing – Specification * PAS 1201: Guide for describing graphene material * PAS 4444: Hydrogen fired gas appliances – GuideAvailability
Copies of British Standards are sold at thSee also
* Institute for Reference Materials and Measurements (EU)References
External links