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Главная/База знаний/IP Ratings (IEC 60529) vs MIL-STD-810 — How Water Testing Differs
Сравнение · 2026

IP Ratings (IEC 60529) vs MIL-STD-810 — How Water Testing Differs.

Both an IP rating and a MIL-STD-810 method tell you how well a product keeps water out — but they ask different questions, under different conditions, for different audiences. Knowing the difference matters when you specify a test or read a datasheet, because a strong rating in one framework does not translate into the other.

What an IP rating measures (IEC 60529)

The IP code's second digit is a fixed, repeatable, product-agnostic label for water ingress. Each level is a defined test:

  • IPX1–IPX2 — dripping water (vertical, then tilted 15°): condensation and light rain.
  • IPX3–IPX4 — spraying and splashing water from increasing angles, up to all directions.
  • IPX5 — a water jet from a 6.3 mm nozzle at 12.5 L/min, 2.5–3 m away: hose-down conditions.
  • IPX6 — a powerful jet from a 12.5 mm nozzle at 100 L/min: heavy seas, strong hose-down.
  • IPX7 — temporary immersion, up to 1 m deep for 30 minutes.
  • IPX8 — continuous immersion beyond 1 m, under conditions agreed with the manufacturer.
  • IPX9K — close-range, high-temperature (80 °C), high-pressure (80–100 bar) jets from four angles: steam and pressure wash-down (per ISO 20653).

One IEC 60529 test gives a rating recognized worldwide, so the same product can be sold across markets without re-testing. One caveat: the ratings are not fully cumulative. Spray levels build on each other (passing IPX6 covers the lower spray levels), but immersion is a separate axis — an IPX7 device is not automatically protected against jets, which is why products that face both carry a dual rating such as IPX6/IPX7.

What MIL-STD-810 water methods measure

MIL-STD-810 does not issue a fixed label. It reproduces a deployment's actual environment, tailored to where and how the equipment is used:

  • Method 506 (Rain) — Procedure I reproduces wind-driven rain (about 18 m/s wind over a defined rainfall rate); Procedure II applies an exaggerated nozzle spray for watertightness confidence on large items; Procedure III simulates dripping from condensation or leaks.
  • Method 512 (Immersion) — water entry during immersion or vehicle fording at a specified depth and time.

Two things set it apart from spray-nozzle IP tests: it can drive rain with wind pressure, and it often conditions the specimen warmer than the water — as the item cools, internal pressure drops and draws water toward weak seals, exposing ingress paths an ambient test would miss.

Key differences

  • Fixed label vs tailored simulation. IP certifies against defined levels; MIL-STD-810 reproduces a real environment you tailor to the mission.
  • Wind and dynamics. MIL 506 Procedure I drives rain at wind velocity; IP spray and jet tests use calibrated nozzles, not a wind field.
  • Thermal. MIL conditions the item warmer than the water to provoke ingress; IP runs at ambient (except IPX9K's hot wash-down).
  • Scope. IP bundles dust and water into one two-digit code; MIL-STD-810 separates environments into distinct methods.
  • Audience. IP suits commercial, industrial and consumer products sold globally under one SKU; MIL-STD-810 suits defense qualification tied to a deployment profile.

They are not interchangeable

An IP67 rating is not a MIL-STD-810 pass, and a MIL-STD-810 rain qualification is not an IP rating — the conditions differ. Many rugged products therefore carry both, for example IP67 alongside MIL-STD-810. Choose the framework your market and contract require, and test the real environment your product will face; if you need both, plan for both.

Testing with ULMEKA

Whether your requirement is an IP rating to IEC 60529 or a method under MIL-STD-810, ULMEKA designs water-ingress test systems to match — PLC + HMI control with real-time monitoring of pressure, flow and temperature. Tell us the standard, the levels or procedures, and your specimen dimensions, and we will propose a matched system.

Связанные стандарты

Часто задаваемые вопросы.

What is the difference between an IP rating and MIL-STD-810 water testing?

An IP rating under IEC 60529 is a fixed, repeatable label: each level is a defined test, and one rating is recognized worldwide. MIL-STD-810 issues no fixed label; it reproduces a deployment's actual environment, tailored to where and how the equipment is used. In practice, IP fits commercial, industrial and consumer products sold globally under one SKU, while MIL-STD-810 fits defense qualification tied to a deployment profile.

Does an IP67 rating mean a product also passes MIL-STD-810?

No. The test conditions differ, so an IP67 rating is not a MIL-STD-810 pass, and a MIL-STD-810 rain qualification is not an IP rating either. That is why many rugged products carry both, for example IP67 alongside MIL-STD-810. Choose the framework your market and contract require; if you need both, plan to test for both.

Does an IPX7 rating also protect against water jets like IPX5 or IPX6?

Not automatically. IP water levels are not fully cumulative. Spray levels build on each other, so a product that passes IPX6 covers the lower spray levels, but immersion is a separate axis. IPX7 means temporary immersion up to 1 m deep for 30 minutes; it says nothing about jets. Products that face both conditions carry a dual rating such as IPX6/IPX7.

What do MIL-STD-810 Methods 506 and 512 actually test?

Method 506 covers rain. Procedure I reproduces wind-driven rain, with about 18 m/s of wind over a defined rainfall rate. Procedure II applies an exaggerated nozzle spray, used for watertightness confidence on large items. Procedure III simulates dripping from condensation or leaks. Method 512 covers immersion: water entry while the item is submerged or during vehicle fording, at a specified depth and time.

Why does MIL-STD-810 often condition the test item warmer than the water?

Heating the item above the water temperature provokes ingress. As it cools during the test, the internal pressure drops and draws water toward weak seals, exposing leak paths an ambient-temperature test would miss. Together with the ability to drive rain with wind pressure, this thermal conditioning is one of the two things that set MIL-STD-810 water methods apart from spray-nozzle IP tests.

What conditions does an IPX9K test simulate?

IPX9K simulates steam and pressure wash-down: water at 80 °C, delivered at 80–100 bar from close range and from four angles, per ISO 20653. It is the only IP water test that runs above ambient temperature; the IPX5 and IPX6 hose-down levels, by contrast, use calibrated nozzles with water at ambient temperature.

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