Wyzenbeek vs Martindale: Which Abrasion Test Should You Specify?

Wyzenbeek vs Martindale: Which Abrasion Test Should You Specify?

Martindale: The standard used in the UK and Europe. Fabric is rubbed in a figure-of-eight motion against a worsted wool abradant. Results in rub counts. Contract minimum 30,000 rubs.
Wyzenbeek: The standard used in the United States. Fabric is rubbed back and forth in straight lines against a cotton duck canvas abradant. Results in double rubs. Contract minimum 15,000 double rubs.
Are they comparable? No. The two tests use different abradants, different motions, and different pass criteria. A Wyzenbeek double rub count cannot be converted to a Martindale rub count.
Which to specify: For UK and European projects, always specify Martindale. For US projects, specify Wyzenbeek. For international projects, request both where possible.

Interior designers working internationally, or sourcing fabric from American suppliers, regularly encounter both Martindale rub counts and Wyzenbeek double rub counts on specification sheets. The two figures look similar — both express abrasion resistance as a number — but they are produced by entirely different test methods and cannot be meaningfully compared. Specifying a Wyzenbeek result on a UK contract project, or a Martindale result on a US project, risks misaligned expectations with clients, contractors, and insurers. This guide explains how each test works, what the results mean, and how to specify correctly for UK and international projects.


The Martindale Test

The Martindale abrasion test is defined by ISO 12947 and BS EN ISO 12947. It is the standard abrasion test used across the UK, Europe, and most international markets outside the United States. When a fabric data sheet lists a rub count without specifying the test method, the default assumption in UK specification is Martindale.

The test works as follows. A circular sample of the fabric being tested is mounted face-down on a machine and rubbed against a standard abradant — a piece of worsted wool fabric — in a figure-of-eight motion that moves the sample across the abradant in all directions simultaneously. This multidirectional motion is designed to replicate the complex, non-linear abrasion that upholstery fabric experiences in real use. The machine counts each complete figure-of-eight cycle as one rub.

The test is run to one of several endpoints. The most common endpoint for upholstery fabrics is fabric breakdown — the point at which two threads have broken or a hole has appeared in the sample. Some test houses also assess and report pilling at intermediate intervals using a separate grading scale. The total rub count at breakdown is the Martindale rub count reported on the data sheet.

For a complete guide to Martindale thresholds by application and what the numbers mean in practice, see our Martindale rub test guide.


The Wyzenbeek Test

The Wyzenbeek abrasion test is defined by ASTM D4157, the American Society for Testing and Materials standard. It is the dominant abrasion test in the US contract furniture and upholstery market. UK designers sourcing fabric from American suppliers, or specifying for projects with US compliance requirements, will encounter Wyzenbeek results on data sheets.

The test works as follows. A rectangular sample of the fabric being tested is mounted on a machine and rubbed back and forth in straight lines — first in the warp direction, then in the weft direction — against a standard abradant. The standard abradant specified by ASTM D4157 is cotton duck canvas, a tightly woven plain-weave cotton fabric significantly more abrasive than the worsted wool used in Martindale. Each complete back-and-forth cycle counts as one double rub.

The Wyzenbeek test runs until the fabric shows noticeable wear or breakdown, and the double rub count at that point is reported. The linear back-and-forth motion differs fundamentally from the multidirectional figure-of-eight motion of Martindale, which is why the two tests produce results that cannot be directly compared.


Why the Results Cannot Be Compared

The most important point for a specifier to understand is that 50,000 Martindale rubs and 50,000 Wyzenbeek double rubs do not represent the same level of abrasion resistance. They are measurements from different instruments using different abradants, different motion patterns, and assessed against different pass criteria.

The cotton duck canvas abradant used in Wyzenbeek is more aggressive than the worsted wool abradant used in Martindale. All else being equal, a fabric tested to Wyzenbeek will reach its endpoint faster than the same fabric tested to Martindale, because the abradant is harsher. This means Wyzenbeek counts tend to be lower than Martindale counts on equivalent fabrics.

However, this relationship is not consistent across all fabric types. Different fibres and constructions respond differently to the two abradants and the two motion patterns. There is no reliable conversion factor between Wyzenbeek double rubs and Martindale rubs. Various informal conversion ratios circulate in the trade — most commonly the suggestion that one Wyzenbeek double rub equals approximately two Martindale rubs — but this ratio has no scientific basis and should not be relied upon for specification.

The only reliable way to compare two fabrics on a like-for-like basis is to ensure both have been tested to the same standard. When building a specification, always confirm which test method produced the figures on the data sheet.


UK and European Thresholds: Martindale

The following thresholds represent current UK and European contract specification practice for Martindale rub counts. For full detail on each threshold and the reasoning behind it, see our Martindale rub test guide.

Light domestic use: 15,000 rubs minimum. Heavy domestic use: 25,000 rubs minimum. Light contract: 30,000 rubs minimum. General contract — hotel lobbies, restaurant seating, office seating: 50,000 to 60,000 rubs. Heavy contract: 80,000 to 100,000 rubs. Severe contract: 100,000 rubs and above.


US Thresholds: Wyzenbeek

The following thresholds are used in the US contract market for Wyzenbeek double rubs. They are not equivalent to the Martindale thresholds above and should not be compared directly.

Residential use: 9,000 to 15,000 double rubs minimum. Light commercial: 15,000 double rubs minimum. Heavy commercial — hotels, restaurants, office seating: 30,000 to 50,000 double rubs. Severe commercial: 100,000 double rubs.


Which Test to Specify and When

For any project in the UK or continental Europe, always specify Martindale to ISO 12947. This is the expected standard, the one UK test houses use, and the one UK and European contract furniture manufacturers certify their fabrics against. If a fabric supplier provides only a Wyzenbeek result and cannot provide a Martindale result, request that the fabric be tested to Martindale before specifying it for a UK contract project.

For projects in the United States, specify Wyzenbeek to ASTM D4157. For international hospitality projects drawing from both European and American suppliers, request both test results where possible and compare within the same test method rather than across methods.

For yacht and marine projects, the fire standard takes precedence over abrasion performance. See our IMO marine fire standards guide.


Pilling: A Separate Test

Both Martindale and Wyzenbeek measure abrasion resistance — structural wear of the yarn. Neither measures pilling resistance, which is the formation of surface fibre balls through tangling of loose fibre ends. Pilling is assessed by a separate test, ISO 12945-2, also run on the Martindale machine but using a different abradant and a different assessment scale. A fabric with an excellent Martindale abrasion count may still pill badly in use. Always request both the Martindale abrasion result and the ISO 12945-2 pilling grade for contract upholstery specification. See our pilling resistance guide.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between Martindale and Wyzenbeek?

Martindale rubs the fabric sample in a multidirectional figure-of-eight motion against a worsted wool abradant, counting each cycle as one rub. Wyzenbeek rubs the fabric back and forth in straight lines against a cotton duck canvas abradant, counting each back-and-forth cycle as one double rub. The abradants, motions, and pass criteria are different. The results cannot be directly compared.

Can I convert Wyzenbeek double rubs to Martindale rubs?

No reliable conversion factor exists. Informal ratios circulate in the trade but have no scientific basis and produce unreliable results across different fabric types. The only reliable approach is to test the same fabric to both standards.

What Martindale count should I specify for a hotel?

For hotel bedroom seating: 30,000 rubs minimum. For hotel restaurant and lobby seating: 50,000 to 60,000 rubs. For hotel bar and high-traffic areas: 80,000 to 100,000 rubs. See our hotel fabric specification guide for full detail.

Is Wyzenbeek used in the UK?

Wyzenbeek is not the standard abrasion test in the UK. Martindale to ISO 12947 is the expected test for UK and European contract specification. Wyzenbeek results may appear on data sheets from American suppliers. Always confirm which test standard produced the figures before using them in a UK specification.

What abradant does Martindale use?

The standard Martindale abradant for upholstery fabric testing is worsted wool fabric to ISO 12947-2. Results against different abradants are not directly comparable. Always confirm the abradant used when reviewing a Martindale certificate.


For Martindale thresholds by application, see our Martindale rub test guide. For pilling resistance, see our pilling resistance guide. For hotel specification, see our hotel fabric specification guide.

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