ISO 11119-3 Qualification Test Cost & Timeline — A 2026 Procurement Guide
“How long does qualification take and what does it cost?” is the second question every COPV procurement engineer asks. The answer is rarely on a vendor’s website — most of it lives in informal conversations between cylinder makers and notified bodies. This guide gives concrete 2026 figures based on lab pricing, accredited-body fees, and typical campaign timelines.
What an ISO 11119-3 qualification campaign actually involves
ISO 11119-3 is the design qualification standard for fully-wrapped composite gas cylinders with a non-load-sharing liner (Type IV). To qualify a new design, the manufacturer must demonstrate that test articles drawn from the production process pass each of the test categories below. Skipping a test is not optional except by formal equivalence with a sister design.
- Burst test (3 articles minimum)
- Hydrostatic pressure cycling
- Ambient-temperature pressure cycling (≥10,000 cycles)
- Extreme-temperature pressure cycling (high + low)
- Drop test (4 orientations)
- Bonfire test
- Gunfire test
- Permeation test
- Sustained-load / stress-rupture demonstration
- Material characterisation (fibre, resin, liner)
- Boss leak-tightness
- NDI / production verification protocols
Plus the documentation: design dossier, FEA report, manufacturing process documentation, traceability of materials lots, operator qualification records, calibration certificates for every measurement instrument used in production.
Cost estimates per test (2026 European pricing)
| Test | Cost band (EUR) | Lab availability |
|---|---|---|
| Burst (3 articles) | €6 000 – €15 000 | BAM, TÜV SÜD, Apragaz, FORCE Technology |
| Hydrostatic + ambient cycling | €8 000 – €18 000 | BAM, TÜV SÜD, Apragaz |
| Extreme-temperature cycling | €12 000 – €22 000 | BAM, TÜV SÜD |
| Drop test (4 orientations) | €2 000 – €5 000 | FORCE Technology, BAM |
| Bonfire | €7 000 – €15 000 | BAM, INERIS, TÜV SÜD |
| Gunfire | €10 000 – €20 000 | BAM, Norwegian Defence (NDMA), specific defence ranges |
| Permeation | €8 000 – €18 000 (90-day test) | Fraunhofer LBF, BAM, TÜV SÜD |
| Stress rupture (statistical) | €20 000 – €60 000 | BAM, NASA WSTF (US), Fraunhofer |
| Material characterisation | €15 000 – €30 000 | Fraunhofer IWM, multiple polymer labs |
| Notified body design review & conformity assessment | €18 000 – €45 000 | TÜV SÜD, Apragaz, Bureau Veritas, DNV |
| Test articles (cylinders made specifically for destructive test) | €20 000 – €60 000 | Internal cost or via prototyping line |
Total range for a single design: €130 000 – €310 000 in test costs alone, plus internal engineering time and documentation. A campaign that runs cleanly first time falls in the €150–200K band; one that needs re-test runs or design iterations climbs toward €300K.
Timeline (calendar weeks)
- Test article production: 8–14 weeks (full lot, traceable materials)
- Burst, hydrostatic, drop, gunfire, bonfire: 4–8 weeks once articles are at the lab (parallel scheduling)
- Cycle testing (10,000+ cycles): 6–12 weeks (cannot be accelerated; test rig limitation)
- Permeation test: 90 days continuous, plus instrumentation setup → 14–16 weeks
- Stress rupture: 6–18 months for full statistical demonstration; equivalence path can shorten to 8–12 weeks
- Notified body design review & certificate issue: 8–16 weeks after final test report
Realistic total: 8–14 months from test-article kickoff to notified-body certificate. Permeation and stress-rupture are the long poles. Programmes with aggressive timelines often run permeation in parallel with the rest of the campaign and use a sister-design equivalence rationale for stress rupture.
Notified body shortlist
For TPED conformity (which references ISO 11119-3), notified bodies are listed in NANDO. The most active for composite cylinders:
- TÜV SÜD (Munich) — large composite-cylinder portfolio, cooperates with BAM for testing
- BAM (Bundesanstalt für Materialforschung) (Berlin) — both notified body and the most equipped composite test lab in Europe
- Apragaz (Brussels) — historically active in composite gas cylinders
- Bureau Veritas (Paris) — broader pressure-equipment scope
- DNV (Oslo) — strong in maritime & offshore composite vessels; PED + TPED scope
For non-EU markets, recognised partners include UL (US), CSA Group (Canada), Lloyd’s Register, KGS (Korea), and CCC (China).
The five most common rejection causes
- Permeation rate above the design limit at the elevated-temperature condition. PET-lined designs at 700 bar have failed here when the liner formulation wasn’t optimised for thermal mobility.
- Hydrostatic pressure cycling fatigue cracks at the boss-liner interface. Boss-bonding adhesion is the single most common production-quality issue; fixing it usually requires a process change, not a design change.
- Bonfire — pressure relief device fails to vent in time. The PRD spec is part of the cylinder qualification under ISO 11119-3 § 7.3; mismatched PRD selection is a frequent rework cause.
- Gunfire — fragmentation outside acceptable envelope. Composite construction reduces fragmentation vs metal but doesn’t eliminate it; geometry matters more than people expect.
- Documentation gap. Material lot traceability, operator qualification, calibration records — boring stuff but causes 1-in-3 conformity-assessment delays.
Equivalence and family qualification
If you’ve already qualified a sister design, ISO 11119-3 allows reduced testing scope based on a documented equivalence rationale. Typical scope reduction is 30–50% of the test cost, but the notified body’s design review fee is unchanged. For a manufacturer with an existing 3 L 300 bar cylinder qualifying a 6 L 300 bar follow-on, the cost typically falls to €60–100K.
What MEYER does
The MEYER HDRX family is qualified to ISO 11119-3, EN 12245, TPED 2010/35/EU, and where applicable EN 17339. Production cylinders ship with the documentation pack needed to register the cylinder under the customer’s TPED periodic inspection programme. For programmes that need a custom cylinder qualified to bespoke programme requirements (aerospace, defence, NLL extension), we run the qualification campaign as a fixed-fee project — typically 12–18 months from spec freeze.
