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Главная/База знаний/RTCA DO-160 vs MIL-STD-810 — Choosing an Environmental Standard for Airborne and Defense Equipment
Сравнение · 2026

RTCA DO-160 vs MIL-STD-810 — Choosing an Environmental Standard for Airborne and Defense Equipment.

Both DO-160 and MIL-STD-810 define environmental conditions and test procedures for equipment, but they serve different worlds. DO-160 governs civil airborne equipment on the FAA/EASA certification path; MIL-STD-810 governs defense materiel, tailored to its mission. Which one applies depends on your market and your certification route — and equipment destined for both often has to satisfy each.

What DO-160 is

RTCA DO-160, "Environmental Conditions and Test Procedures for Airborne Equipment," is the de facto environmental requirement for civil avionics. The current revision is DO-160G (2010); the technically identical European version is EUROCAE ED-14G. It is referenced by FAA Technical Standard Orders and EASA certification specifications, so qualifying to it is part of the airworthiness path for equipment installed on aircraft.

DO-160 is organized into 26 sections, each covering one environmental stress with selectable categories you qualify against. Its signature test is Section 4, Temperature and Altitude, which combines temperature extremes with reduced pressure to reproduce flight conditions — from mild pressurized-cockpit categories to severe unpressurized cases (on the order of −55 °C to +85 °C at high altitude). Beyond climate and mechanics, DO-160 also bundles EMC, radio-frequency, lightning and electrostatic-discharge sections into the same document.

What MIL-STD-810 is

MIL-STD-810 is the U.S. Department of Defense standard for environmental engineering and test methods. Rather than a fixed certification, it is a tailoring framework: methods are selected and adapted to a platform's life-cycle environmental profile. It is not aircraft-specific — it spans ground, sea and air, with altitude handled by Method 500.6 — and it is environmental-only, with electromagnetic compatibility covered separately by MIL-STD-461.

Key differences

  • Domain and purpose. DO-160 targets civil airborne equipment and is certification-driven; MIL-STD-810 targets defense materiel and is mission-tailored.
  • Certification path. DO-160 feeds airworthiness approval (FAA TSO, EASA via ED-14); MIL-STD-810 answers a contract's or program's requirements.
  • How you apply it. DO-160 means complying with a defined category per section; MIL-STD-810 means tailoring methods to a deployment profile.
  • Scope. DO-160 includes EMC, RF, lightning and ESD in one document; MIL-STD-810 is environmental-only (EMC sits in MIL-STD-461).
  • Overlap. Both cover temperature, altitude, vibration, humidity, water, sand and dust, salt fog and shock — the same physics, with different procedures and severities.

Which one applies to you

For equipment installed on civil aircraft, the answer is DO-160 (ED-14 in Europe). For military platforms, it is MIL-STD-810. For dual-use or airborne defense equipment, it is frequently both — and a DO-160G comparison analysis is a recognized way to relate prior MIL-STD-810 qualification to airworthiness requirements. Choose by your certification route and your customer, and test the real environment the equipment will face.

Testing with ULMEKA

The environmental conditions common to both standards — temperature, altitude and low pressure, humidity, water ingress, salt fog and more — are what ULMEKA's climatic test chambers are built to reproduce, under PLC + HMI control with real-time monitoring. Whether your requirement is a DO-160 category or a method under MIL-STD-810, tell us the standard, the categories or methods, and your specimen dimensions, and we will propose a matched system.

Связанные стандарты

Часто задаваемые вопросы.

What is the difference between RTCA DO-160 and MIL-STD-810?

DO-160 governs civil airborne equipment on the FAA/EASA certification path; FAA Technical Standard Orders and EASA certification specifications reference it. MIL-STD-810 is the U.S. Department of Defense standard for defense materiel and is not aircraft-specific. They are also applied differently. Complying with DO-160 means meeting a defined category in each section, while MIL-STD-810 is a tailoring framework whose methods are adapted to a platform's life-cycle environmental profile.

Does MIL-STD-810 include EMC testing?

No. MIL-STD-810 is environmental-only; electromagnetic compatibility for defense equipment sits separately in MIL-STD-461. DO-160 goes the other way and bundles EMC, radio-frequency, lightning and electrostatic-discharge sections into the same document, alongside its climatic and mechanical tests.

How do I know whether my equipment needs DO-160 or MIL-STD-810?

Choose by certification route and customer. Equipment installed on civil aircraft falls under DO-160 (ED-14 in Europe), the standard FAA Technical Standard Orders and EASA certification specifications reference. For military platforms the answer is MIL-STD-810, where testing answers a contract's or program's requirements rather than a fixed certification. Dual-use equipment headed for both markets frequently has to satisfy each standard.

Can prior MIL-STD-810 qualification be used to meet DO-160 requirements?

Partly. A DO-160G comparison analysis is a recognized way to relate prior MIL-STD-810 qualification to airworthiness requirements, which matters for dual-use and airborne defense equipment that frequently has to satisfy both. The two standards do overlap on temperature, altitude, vibration, humidity, water, sand and dust, salt fog and shock, but the procedures and severities differ.

What does DO-160 Section 4 test?

Section 4, Temperature and Altitude, is DO-160's signature test. It combines temperature extremes with reduced pressure to reproduce flight conditions. The categories are selectable and run from mild pressurized-cockpit cases to severe unpressurized ones, on the order of −55 °C to +85 °C at high altitude.

What is the current revision of RTCA DO-160?

The current revision is DO-160G, published in 2010; its technically identical European counterpart is EUROCAE ED-14G, which is how the standard reaches EASA-side certification. The document runs to 26 sections, each covering one environmental stress with selectable categories that equipment qualifies against.

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