John,
 
The CE-mark is mandatory to ship within Europe. 
The GS-mark is not mandatory to ship and GS mark was not mandatory to ship
within Europe or Germany in the past. 
 
The regulation for the GS-mark is part of the German Safety law. In order to
issue a GS-mark certificate the requirements of the German law have to be
fulfilled. 
EMC is part of the requirement if applicable for the product. The GS-mark is
intended for the user to support him by buying goods. 
 
Other labels like VDE, TÜV etc are private labels and the requirements might
be depended of the organisation, which issues these marks. 
 
 
I copied Mr. Gürlich from the Ministry so he might give us some additional
advice.
 
 
Horst
 
 
 
 
INNOVA Product Service GmbH
Ampferweg 6
87677 Stöttwang
Tel: 08345-952727
Fax : 08345-952729
 

Von: [email protected] [
ailto:[email protected]]Im Auftrag von Tyra, John
Gesendet: Mittwoch, 26. Mai 2004 16:10
An: 'Ing. Gert Gremmen'; [email protected]; Gary McInturff; EMC-PSTC
(E-mail)
Betreff: RE: Legal requirements linking GS and EMC
 
I believe Gert is 100% correct in that the GS Mark is not legally required in
Germany but for most standards my understanding is, for most types pf
equipment, this has always been the case even before the CE Mark came into
existence. For the equipment I worked on at TUV, EDP, Home Audio, Lab
Equipment, I don't believe the GS Mark was ever legally required. All you
needed to do was prove compliance to the German Equipment Safety Law and
getting a  GS Mark was the most recognized way to do this. You could actually
"self declare" if you wanted to but of course many large retail customers
required a GS Mark on products as a condition to buy them from you in the pre
CE days.
 
 
Concerning tying EMC to Safety for GS Mark Approval, I worked for a TUV for 14
years and worked on hundreds of GS Mark licensed projects,  to EN/IEC 60950,
60065,  and proof of EMC compliance was never a requirement for GS Mark
Certification. For these types of products the GS Mark Certification was
always based strictly on the LVD and the associated Safety Standards. 
 
We presently get GS and CB certification for EN/IEC60065 for all of our
powered products with TUV and are not required to show proof of EMC compliance
in any case.
 
 IN the pre CE days I do believe there were some types of equipment which did
legally require a GS Mark and where proof of EMC compliance  was required,
i.e. patient contact Medical devices I believe, but this was not the case for
all types of equipment?
 
 I would be interested if anyone can show me where in the German Equipment
Safety Law or any other regulation both Safety and EMC are required for a GS
Mark?? I also thought GS certification was regulated by the German Government,
BZT??, so I would expect there would be a minimum set of requirements that
every Accredited lab must follow??
 
Horst does this sound correct?
 
Looking forward to more information on this subject

From: Ing. Gert Gremmen [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, May 26, 2004 4:31 AM
To: [email protected]; Gary McInturff; EMC-PSTC (E-mail)
Subject: RE: Legal requirements linking GS and EMC
Within the European safety regulations, no mark has a legal background but the
CE-mark.
All marks like KEMA,VDE,TUV,GS (and other) are private marks with no EC-legal
value, and they indeed may require
anything from the applicant they want to , including John's Pound of Flesh
(JOPOF)   ;<).
 
Before CE, these marks and the associated test houses were the only way to
obtain any proof
of safety for your product, and thats why these marks obtained some type of
market domination.
For historic or other reasons, many companies still require one of these
marks, if you want to qualify for
their purchases..... You may contest or comply , depending on your position in
negociation. 
Of course, the requirements to go with these marks may include more severe
testing, and possibly
enhanced safety, to be judged by you and your clients.
 
Inside any EC-country, no LEGAL requirements MAY exist that demand more then
CE requirements,
unless aspects are adressed, not regulated under the CE new approach
directives.  The CE mark was meant
to GUARANTEE free movement of goods between EC members, addressing consumer
SAFETY as a main goal.
 
I do not know much about the legal backgrounds of the GS mark in Germany, but
these laws may 
in some aspects be contradictory to EC-law, if they prohibite free movement of
goods.
Anyway, some EC members still do not fully comply to EC regulations, ate least
not to
the spirit of it.
 
Regarding Ken's remark:  Safety of a product may well be influenced by EMC
(mainly Immunity),
and the EMC directive does NOT address product safety specifically. So in order
to obtain an overall view of a product's safety, EMC reports may be valuable.
( althoug the emission data may not be the first to address)
The GS mark does address overall safety, and therefore requires EMC data.
 
Many Low Voltage Harmonized standards do however, address safety aspects,  and
many of these standards have also been harmonized under the EMC directive.
 
The safety aspects of EMC are still underexposed , however, within EC
regulations.
 
Regards,

Gert Gremmen
Approvals manager
======================================================
ce-test, qualified testing
Member of EMC committee CENELEC/IEC

+ Independent Consultancy Services
+ Compliance Testing and Design for CE
+ Improvement of product quality and reliability
+ Testing services according to:
  Electro magnetic Compatibility             89/336/EC
  Electrical Safety                           73/23/EC
  Medical Devices                             93/42/EC
  Radio & Telecommunication Terminal equipment 99/5/EC

Website:  www.cetest.nl (english)
          www.ce-test.nl (dutch)
Phone :  +31 10 415 24 26
Fax :    +31 10 415 49 53
======================================================

  

From: [email protected] 
mailto:[email protected]]On Behalf Of Horst Haug
Sent: Wednesday, May 26, 2004 8:33 AM
To: Gary McInturff; EMC-PSTC (E-mail)
Subject: AW: Legal requirements linking GS and EMC
Gary,
 
as one of the GS mark certification organisations I like to give some
explanations.
 
The GS mark is the only safety mark backed up by laws in Europe. The
regulations for the GS-mark are defined in the German law for safety. 
It is possible to apply for the status as a GS mark certification body and
test lab by  all test and certification organisations located in Europe. The
audits are done by the German government. 
 
The GS mark is a mark for the user. It should show the conformity to safety,
EMC, it includes to check the user manual, it contains somehow the
functionality of the product to be checked. The safety check should be based
on standards, but the law defines an overall safety for the user, so sometimes
GS means to check more like for example misuse. 
 
GS is not a quality mark, so we do not check, if a product lasts for one year
of for longer time.  The GS mark test houses and certification bodies are
required to have an insurance. In case of issues on the market there is a
defined escalation path.  
 
By law, it is not allowed to issue a GS mark only based on safety testing
without taking care of EMC. If there is no EMC report available, then you
might get a trade mark label like INNOVA mark, VDE, TÜV or others, but this
is just showing, that one test house has done testing for safety. 
 
With best regards
Horst
 
 
INNOVA Product Service GmbH
Ampferweg 6
87677 Stöttwang
Tel: 08345-952727
Fax : 08345-952729
 

Von: [email protected] [
ailto:[email protected]]Im Auftrag von Gary McInturff
Gesendet: Mittwoch, 26. Mai 2004 01:13
An: EMC-PSTC (E-mail)
Betreff: Legal requirements linking GS and EMC
 
Gents,
    The claim has once more been put forth by a major European based NRTL doing 
business in the us that they cannot grant a GS mark
for ITE equipment unless they have the emissions data during the safety review.
    I believe that they may want it but it is not required under statutes, and
in fact can hamper the certification process by turning a somewhat parallel
process into an absolutely serial process. About the only connection that
comes to mind is the X and Y capacitors - at least in most cases. They have
safety requirements as well as EMC requirements. So if one goes through safety
with parts that are identified as safety critical items and then have to make
changes because of EMC one has to return to the safety agency and have a
review of those components. If not the factory inspections would show a
non-approved (sorry not a good choice of words) to maintain the agency mark.
But the EMC data does not need to be presented.
    In my opinion, and you all may well be about to change that, is that the
safety NRTL has no rights under the LVD, EMC, or the CE marking process to tie
the two processes into their approval. If there isn't such a legal requirement
I will be dropping the vendor and move on to one of the many others who can
now provide the same services. If there is such a law I'm stuck and grudgingly
concede.
    Thoughts?
    Thanks
    Gary McInturff
    

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