Why Tyne and Wear needs real PTV data.
Manufacturing and engineering sites across Tyne and Wear deal with oil, coolant and detergent contamination that sled-based friction tests cannot reliably measure. The HSE is explicit: on contaminated floors, the pendulum is the method that produces defensible PTV data.
Automotive (Nissan Sunderland), offshore energy support, and one of the strongest hospitality districts in the North East.
Towns & areas served in Tyne and Wear
Typical test zones in Tyne and Wear
- Production floors
- Oil-contaminated walkways
- Canteen areas
- Washdown zones
- Gantries
Pendulum testing. Not opinion.
The pendulum method — defined in BS 7976 and BS EN 16165, and referenced throughout HSE guidance — is the only test HSE considers reliable on wet or contaminated floors. A rubber slider swings from a fixed height and drags across the test surface for exactly 127mm; energy lost to friction is recorded as a Pendulum Test Value (PTV) on a scale of 0 to 150.
HSE classifies any PTV below 25 as a high slip potential. 25–35 is moderate. A PTV of 36 or above, measured wet and dry with the correct reference slider, is the benchmark for a floor considered safe under normal use. Every report we produce in Tyne and Wear is issued under our UKAS ISO/IEC 17025 accreditation (Lab 7933) — the method, the technician and the equipment are all independently audited.
Slip testing in Tyne and Wear
Fixed quote within one working day. UKAS-accredited report in five.
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