Deutsches Institut für Normung
Deutsches Institut für Normung Registered_association_ is a German non-profit organization and acting as national organization for standardization. DIN is the German ISO member body. DIN is headquartered in Berlin. There are around thirty thousand DIN Standards, covering nearly every field of technology.
History
Founded in 1917 as the Normenausschuß der deutschen Industrie, the NADI was renamed Deutscher Normenausschuß in 1926 to reflect that the organization now dealt with standardization issues in many fields, not just for industrial products. In 1975, it was renamed again to Deutsches Institut für Normung, or 'DIN' and is recognised by the German government as the official national-standards body, representing German interests at the international and European levels.The acronym, 'DIN' is often incorrectly expanded as Deutsche Industrienorm. This is largely due to the historic origin of the DIN as "NADI". The NADI indeed published their standards as DI-Norm. For example, the first published standard was 'DI-Norm 1' in 1918. Many people still mistakenly associate DIN with the old DI-Norm naming convention.
One of the earliest, and probably the best known, is DIN 476 — the standard that introduced the A-series paper sizes in 1922 — adopted in 1975 as International Standard ISO 216. Common examples in modern technology include DIN and mini-DIN connectors for electronics, and the DIN rail.
DIN SPEC 3105, published in 2020, is "the first German standard to be published under an open license to implement an open standardisation process".
DIN organisation
DIN is a nonprofit organization by German law. The nonprofit owns DIN Solutions GmbH, which produces the DIN contents and DIN Media, which sells the DIN-standard manuals. DIN is shareholder of DIN Bauportal GmbH and DQS Holding GmbH.DIN standard designation
The designation of a DIN standard shows its origin :- DIN # is used for German standards with primarily domestic significance or designed as a first step toward international status. E DIN # is a draft standard and DIN V # is a preliminary standard.
- DIN EN # is used for the German edition of European standards.
- DIN ISO # is used for the German edition of ISO standards.
- DIN EN ISO # is used if the standard has also been adopted as a European standard.,
Examples of DIN standards
- DIN 476: international paper sizes
- DIN 1451: typeface used by German railways and on traffic signs
- DIN 31635: transliteration of the Arabic language
- DIN 41612: mechanical standard for backplane electrical connection
- DIN 72552: electric terminal numbers in automobiles
Access to standards
For four EN standards, which are available as DIN-EN standards for a fee from DIN Media GmbH, the European Court of Justice decided on March 5, 2024, in the Malamud decision, that these must be made available free of charge because these standards are part of European Union law.
Critics
How DIN creates standards is not transparent. The majority of the standardization committees consist of representatives of the companies that are affected by the standards. DIN does not publish the names of committee members.In 2023, the Federal Ministry for Housing, Urban Development and Building launched an initiative to question DIN standards because they are considered a cost driver. “A central goal is to speed up planning and construction and reduce construction costs in order to create more affordable housing. “The building standards are now being reviewed,” said a spokesman for Klara Geywitz's ministry in 2023.