Hi All,

Shielding effectiveness is normally measured using plane
waves (relatively far from the source). This method of
measurement for shielding effectivenes does not always
correspond to the way a shielding material is used. It is
especially true when shielding material is incorporated
into small products, such as the new wave of wireless
devices on the market. If you rely on shielding to keep
different parts of a product from interfering with each
other, correlation of specification to use is especially
important.

The August 2000 Technical Tidbit on http://www.dsmith.org
(or http://emcesd.com) describes a simple method of
shielding effectiveness measurement that can be easily done
in the development laboratory. This measurement method can
give a better measure of shielding effectiveness that
industry standard measurement techniques when the shield is
close to the source being shielded.

Has anyone here who is into shielding used something like
this method which uses magnetic field loops?

Doug
-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------
    ___          _           Doug Smith
     \          / )          P.O. Box 1457
      =========              Los Gatos, CA 95031-1457
   _ / \     / \ _           TEL/FAX: 408-356-4186/358-3799
 /  /\  \ ] /  /\  \         Mobile:  408-858-4528
|  q-----( )  |  o  |        Email:   [email protected]
 \ _ /    ]    \ _ /         Website: http://www.dsmith.org
-----------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------
This message is from the IEEE EMC Society Product Safety
Technical Committee emc-pstc discussion list.

To cancel your subscription, send mail to:
     [email protected]
with the single line:
     unsubscribe emc-pstc

For help, send mail to the list administrators:
     Jim Bacher:              [email protected]
     Michael Garretson:        [email protected]

For policy questions, send mail to:
     Richard Nute:           [email protected]

Reply via email to