The current practice to determine friction properties of sliding isolation systems is to perform displacement-controlled dynamic tests where the effects of several loading conditions with different amplitudes, loading velocities, and vertical forces are of concern. The number of cycles in these tests is generally three for most of the loading conditions assumed to be representative of seismic conditions. On the other hand, the isolator may undergo small-amplitude but large-cycles of service motions due to thermal deformations and accidental loads. In that case, the methodology requires to perform cyclic tests on small-scale samples of the slider material (not the isolator) considering very large accumulated sliding distances such as 1000 m ...