I would like to add to this discussions that I believe that all electrical 
equipment used in the *workplace* must be "approved" by an NRTL.  This is 
prescribed by CFR 29 Section 1910.  This compliance is administrated by 
OSHA.  The only exceptions are "custom" equipment for which no standard(s) 
exist.  Even then, testing must be conducted as determined by OSHA to 
establish it's generic safety.

These are just *my* thoughts and comments...


Jerome Fix, P.E.
-------------
Original Text
From: "Farnsworth,Heber" <[email protected]>, on 1/22/97 
9:10 AM:
For most sales in the US, listing is more a recommended marketing and
liability tool than a requirement.

To sell to the US government, or to many state and local government
agencies, or within the boundaries of a few cities, listing by a
Nationally Recognized Test Laboratory (NRTL) is required. UL is one of
many NRTL's, as are CSA in Canada, Factory Mutual (FM), ETL, and some
other test labs. Your choice of NRTL depends on expertise in your
product type, market value of the mark in your industry, how willing the
test lab is to work with you, and lastly, price.

The listing covers about the same area as the Low Voltage Directive
(LVD), and usually versions of the same standard can be used for both.
There is generally a periodic product reevaluation (followup) at your
factory, which, outside North America is sometimes contracted out to a
test house in the local area. You'll pay for the inspector's time,
typically 1 to 4 hours, 4 times per year.

In Canada, certifications are mandatory for electrical (and many other)
devices. This can be from CSA or from another approved test house, very
similarly to the NRTL Listing. Most of the above-mentioned NRTL+s are
also approved for Canada, so you can get one-stop shopping.

If you choose your test house carefully, you can cover European LVD
testing, US Listing, and Canadian Certification with one set of tests at
one test house, using one standard (plus national deviations),
minimizing cost and time.

[standard disclaimer]

 ---------------------
From: Juan Pedro Pena
... how is the situation in USA. I know if you have UL mark, you can
sell in any state, but that means you only can use the UL associated
laboratories and you have to pay the certification fee every year. Much
more expensive than the EU system. Is it that true?...

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