1.Simulating the Choking Risk:

  Blog    |     February 23, 2026

Small part tests are a critical safety measure specifically designed to prevent choking hazards in young children (typically under 3 years old). Here's why they work and are essential:

  • The Core Problem: Young children explore the world by putting objects in their mouths. Objects small enough to fit completely into the back of a child's mouth and block the airway (trachea) can cause choking, which can lead to brain damage or death within minutes.
  • Anatomical Basis: The tests use a standardized choke tube (a cylinder) with specific internal diameters. These diameters are based on extensive anatomical studies of the throats of young children:
    • Small Part Cylinder: ~1.25 inches (31.7 mm) diameter (for toys intended for children under 3).
    • Small Ball Cylinder: ~1.75 inches (44.4 mm) diameter (for balls intended for children under 3).
  • The Test: If a toy part can fit entirely inside the cylinder (under specified force conditions), it's deemed a "small part" and is considered a potential choking hazard for children under 3.
  1. Identifying Hazardous Objects:

    • The test provides a clear, objective, and measurable standard. Instead of subjective judgment ("Is this too small?"), manufacturers and testers have a physical gauge to determine if a part poses a significant choking risk.
    • It catches parts that might look safe but are actually small enough to block an airway, and parts that look small but are actually too large to pass the test.
  2. Accounting for Force and Breakage:

    • The Force Test: Parts aren't just dropped into the tube. They are subjected to a specific force (e.g., 4.45 Newtons, roughly the force of a child biting down) while being pushed into the choke tube. This simulates how a child might bite, suck, or compress a part with their mouth and jaw.
    • Simulating Breakage: The test often includes components being subjected to torque, tension, or compression forces before being tested in the choke tube. This ensures that if a toy breaks under normal play, the resulting pieces are still too large to be a choking hazard. If a piece can break off and fit into the choke tube under force, the toy fails the test.
  3. Regulatory Compliance and Mandatory Warnings:

    • Legal Requirement: Small part testing is mandated by major safety standards worldwide (e.g., ASTM F963 in the US, EN 71 in Europe, Canada's Consumer Protection Act). Toys intended for children under 3 must pass this test to be legally sold.
    • Triggering Warnings: If a toy contains small parts (even if the main toy itself is large), it must carry a prominent warning label: "WARNING: CHOKING HAZARD - Small parts. Not for children under 3 yrs." This alerts parents and caregivers to the specific risk.
  4. Preventing Access to Hazardous Components:

    • The test forces manufacturers to either:
      • Eliminate small parts entirely in toys for under-3s.
      • Ensure small parts are securely enclosed within a larger, non-removable component that cannot be broken off during play (and the enclosed part itself must pass the small part test if it could be accessed).
      • Use packaging that makes small parts inaccessible until the child is old enough (e.g., blister packs for toys with small parts for older children).

In Summary:

Small part tests prevent choking hazards by:

  • Objectively Identifying objects small enough to block a young child's airway using a standardized anatomical gauge (choke tube).
  • Simulating Real-World Forces (biting, compression, breakage) to ensure parts that could become hazardous during play are caught.
  • Mandating Compliance through strict safety standards, forcing manufacturers to design safer products or include appropriate warnings.
  • Empowering Consumers with clear warning labels so they can make informed choices about toys for young children.

Essentially, these tests create a critical safety barrier, ensuring that objects reaching the hands (and mouths) of the most vulnerable children are too large to cause a fatal choking incident. They are a cornerstone of toy safety regulation.


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