Ed,

the history of EMI control in Germany goes back to only a few months after
the first public broadcast station in Berlin began its operation in 1923.
VDE set up a "Commission on Radio Interference" in 1930; their first
guidelines were published in 1934 and - as you already guessed - the first
revision took until 1951.

Rolf Schaefer
Unisys
International Certification Centre






[email protected] on 16.07.98 00:36:43

Please respond to [email protected]

To:   "'emc-pstc list server'" <[email protected]>
cc:    (bcc: Rolf Schaefer/IS/DE/Unisys)
Subject:  RE: Looking for Horror Stories






------------------------
  From: "Grasso, Charles (Chaz)" <[email protected]>
  Subject: RE: Looking for Horror Stories
  Date: Wed, 15 Jul 1998 12:54:13 -0600
  To: 'emc-pstc list server' <[email protected]>, "'Knighten, Jim'"
<[email protected]>, "'WOODS, RICHARD'"
<[email protected]>
  Cc: "'[email protected]'" <[email protected]>


> You will have to go back a number of years to find the first
> non-EMEmissions standard. As I recall, the first EME standard was
> actually VDE 0871 and the German government was concerned
> primarily with emissions interfering with legitimate communication.
> Largely as a result of that CBEMA released a document that finally
> became
> FCC CFR47 Part 15. And so an industry was born.
>

>
> Thank you
> Charles Grasso
> EMC Engineer
> StorageTek

It would be interesting to know when the first VDE commercial emission
standard was published. However, I know that the FCC Part 15 and Part 18
emission requirements were in place as early as 1968. I started out doing
field measurements for Part 18 industrial stuff (like RF welding and RF
industrial process equipment). I still have very vivid memories of
measuring "field strength at a 1000 foot radius on each of 18 radials" and
"at 1 mile on the strongest radial", whether in the middle of a cornfield
or the edge of a river.

I also did Part 15 CE and RE testing, and sometimes a manufacturer used the
same FCC data and compared it to the existing VDE spec limits. It was my
understanding that the FCC and VDE conducted emission protocol was based on
the Military Mil-I-6181 spec (in which there was a design note on the
construction of a 5 uH LISN). The use of an LISN traces back to a US Army
Air Force WWII study on a medium bomber power bus interference.

I don't have much factual basis, but my guess is that German regulatory
activities suffered a bit of a discontinuity circa 1945, and that, by the
time VDE got its first new issue of pencils, they decided to use the
existing FCC and US Mil precedents.

If I've been around since before the industry was born, does that place me
among the undead? But, having been certified that I'm not a competent body,
whadda I know?

Ed

--------------------------
Ed Price
[email protected]
Electromagnetic Compatibility Lab
Cubic Defense Systems
San Diego, CA.  USA
619-505-2780
List-Post: [email protected]
Date: 07/15/1998
Time: 15:36:45
--------------------------







Reply via email to