ISO approves and publishes a new ISO 23952

ISO approves and publishes a new ISO 23952

2020 standard recognized by ANSI / DMSC QIF 3.0 from DMSC (Digital Metrology Standards Consortium)

Innovalia Metrology has been committed to interoperability across different formats and standards for over 10 years, such as DMI, DMO, QIF, M3, or CSV; offer full integration and facilitate optimal data transfer in quality management processes.


In turn, Tony Ventura, CEO of Datapixel, a company that is part of Innovalia Metrology along with Trimek and Unimetrik, is part of the DMSC group that contributed to the achievement of the new standard. Moreover, the collaboration between Innovalia Metrology, DMSC, and NIST has always been close with the aim of collaborating, developing, and applying standards that facilitate interoperability.


In recent years, the Metromeet International Conference on Metrology, which takes place in Bilbao and is organized by the Innovalia Group, has had the pleasure of collaborating with DMSC members and organizing discussion forums with high-level European industry representatives in the standards area. Forums that have grown over time and in Metromeet editions, allowing Innovalia Metrology, the conference sponsor, to participate in the progress towards a more interconnected and autonomous industry.


Innovalia Metrology M3’s measurement software is fully compliant with the QIF (Quality Information Framework) standard designed to help manufacturers reduce costs, provide a common format for measurement results, and enable digital conversion using MBE (Model Enterprise).


The new standard, known as ISO 23952: 2020, is available directly in ISO as “Automation and Integration Systems – Quality Information Structure (QIF) – Integrated Quality Information Model”. The standard ideally defines, organizes, and links quality information including measurement plans, resources, part geometry with product and manufacturing information (PMI), measurement rule templates, results, and statistical analysis.


QIF 3.0 was adopted as an ANSI (American National Standards Institute) standard in 2018, then submitted to the ISO / TC 184 / SC 4 technical committee in early 2019, and formally approved and published by ISO in July 2020.

To know more, please check Innovalia Metrology.

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