The testing standards need not only consider environmental conditions, but the rifle and its tunes condition, the energy output relative to the barrel length, state of tune, potential hammer bounce, shroud diameter and if its vented, air stripper efficiency/diameters, pellet weight and fps range...A 19" barrel making 50 fpe in .22 cal will be a lot louder than a 23.5" barrel making 50 fpe, even more if it suffers from hammer bounce, has a poorly designed air stripper with a skinnier shroud, and is tuned to keep the valve open longer than necessary.
Any change to the above variables can vastly alter the results/data obtained in a test, simply skewing results from one user to the next due to their rifle or its tune alone.
This is unless you only allow one guy, with one gun become part of the standardization which imo, not only reduces possible legitimacy of the results, the testers rifle would still be need to be dialed in to within the median users arrangement, but that by no means will guarantee one user with a 19" or 27" barrel will yield the same results as a tester does with a 23.5" barrel, no matter how standardized you make every other variable, as the 3 barrels may all benefit from different designs with different baffle arrangements, be them their shape or distance apart. The 19" barrel might have to deal with 1200 psi in the first set of baffles, where as the 23.5" may have to deal with 900 psi, and the 27" 500 psi, to that, one baffle design or spacing may be superior in the 19" barrel but inferior to another in the 27"...
-Matt