When I was at my last company, we had a similar situation. The customer was
the one who would provide the cable to the EUT. 

In the report it was a 'modification' note which indicated that a clamp-on
ferrite,
P/N xxxxyyyy was used. We then provided the ferrite with each shipment,
along with a detailed instruction on usage. A warning was included on the
instruction sheet that the ferrite was required to meet emission
specifications, and if it was not used, compliance is not guaranteed. 

The instruction sheet was prominently located within the documentation
package.
However, take note that this product was not consumer goods, and trained
installers 
were required for that product. Therefore, there was some assurance that the
ferrite
was indeed going to be installed as instructed.

If this was a product that was sold directly to a home user, I wouldn't feel
comfortable with this. Most times a home user just wants to get the thing
running, and doesn't care, or more often doesn't read such instructions. 

John A. Juhasz
Product Qualification &
Compliance Engr.

Fiber Options, Inc.
80 Orville Dr. Suite 102
Bohemia, NY 11716 USA

Tel: 516-567-8320 ext. 324
Fax: 516-567-8322 


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, June 25, 1999 3:37 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: emc compliance





Here's a question....  If you have a product that, at one particular
frequency
during radiated RF, you simply cannot get to pass the requirements of the
relative CE standard without putting an external ferrite on the cable, is it
"legal" , to still mark it, provided you inform your customers via the
declaration of conformity or in the manual etc., that they could experience
problems at such and such frequencies and if they do, to use a ferrite?
(boy,
that was a mouthful).  Faced with a redesign or a statement, the words would
be
the easier route to take, since in this case, the customer could probably
never
see the problem frequency range.   Comments?

thank you for any advise,

Lisa



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