Dear Michael,

For European requirements, you have to read the EN55022 and its Amendments 1 
and 2. In the Amendment1, the chapter 9.1 explain what you have to do with your 
mother board. You have to test it in a commercial unit (classB) and if the test 
results are OK, then you can affix the CE marking on your board. 
================================================================
Pierre Selva
Laboratory responsible                  EMC and Safety laboratory
SMEE Actions Mesures                    Ph : 33 4 76 65 76 50
ZI des Blanchisseries                   Fx : 33 4 76 66 18 30
38500 VOIRON - France           e-mail : actionsmesu...@compuserve.com
================================================================


-----Original Message-----
From:   michael.garret...@radisys.com [SMTP:michael.garret...@radisys.com]
Sent:   Tuesday, August 24, 1999 10:44 PM
To:     emc-p...@ieee.org
Subject:        CE Marking requirements

 

Well group, if you care to help out another American confused by the specific
requirements for Europe, I would appreciate it.  I seem to be getting varying
stories from different test houses as to what is required for one of our
products.  These are big enough players that pitting one against another is not
something I want to undertake at this point.

We currently manufacture a motherboard which is sold both by itself and with a
chassis which includes power supply, hard drive and floppy.  We are currently
going through our internal EMC validation to ensure that we meet both FCC Class
B and EN 55022 Class B levels.  Our experience on previous products has been if
we clear emissions, we haven't had problems in other areas, but we'll be testing
to EN 55024 of immunity, as well.

The issue arises when we discuss testing of the system versus testing of the
motherboard alone.  Within the US, the FCC regulations permit an additional 6dB
margin for "open chassis" measurement, so long as those frequencies fall back
within the class B levels with the cover on.  This does not appear to be a
problem for our product.

We have been told by different parties that for Europe,

(a) there is no requirement to test "open chassis" and that we can CE mark the
board as compliant as long as we have shown that it can meet the class B levels
within a chassis of our choosing

and

(b) we are still required to perform "open chassis" tests, however, there is no
6dB margin and the board will have to meet the EN 50022 class B levels with the
cover off.

We're having a little more difficulty making things work using the (b) approach.
I am specifically concerned about staying far enough below the levels that we're
not going to potentially pass today and fail 6 months from now due to a slight
drift in tolerances of components, test equipment or test engineers'
dispositions.

I have the texts of the EMC directive, as well as the test requirements
specified in the above documents and I'm happy to wade through them if you can
point me in the right direction.  I will be heading that direction in the next
day or two if I don't receive a response.  I'm hoping, however, that someone in
the group can shave a few hours of exceptionally captivating reading from my
life by pointing me in the right direction.

Regards,

Michael Garretson
Compliance Engineer
RadiSys Corporation



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