John/Ghery,

>Note the distinction contained in the note.  The list is not 
>exhaustive, but should illustrate the intent.  Ports for connecting 
>boxes in a system are not telecom.  Ports for connecting ?stuff? over a 
>wide distance are telecom.

Would this still apply even if the boxes were connected via CAT5 cable?  Would
the label "Telecom Port" only be applied if both criteria were met; "wide
distance" and the appropriate medium for that distance?

These are issues we, as a compliance lab, face on a daily basis and our
clients are relying on our expertise and true understanding of the how-to as
well as the intent of a standard.  Once you understand the intent, everything
else falls into place, or should.  
I'm struggling with the whole Telecom port issue a bit because I think I
understand the intent but have not been able to establish criteria as to when
this test applies.  Most of our customers are content to have all LAN ports
tested but, knowing that some of the ports on the shelf are loop back using a
6' CAT5e to an adjacent card seems excessive.  Would this fall into Ghery's
example of "ports for connecting boxes in a system" even if connected via CAT5
where extended lengths could be used or was that statement specific to other
types of cable?

Thanks, 

Steve O'Steen
Director, EMC
Advanced Compliance Solutions, Inc.
[email protected]
770-831-8048 ext. 210
www.acstestlab.com
 
 

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From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of John Woodgate
Sent: Tuesday, September 15, 2009 12:52 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: EMC question

In message 
<4c5e6457cd7911469a07260381288c2846285...@orsmsx502.amr.corp.intel.com>, 
dated Tue, 15 Sep 2009, "Pettit, Ghery" <[email protected]> writes:

>Note the distinction contained in the note.  The list is not 
>exhaustive, but should illustrate the intent.  Ports for connecting 
>boxes in a system are not telecom.  Ports for connecting ?stuff? over a 
>wide distance are telecom.

Indeed. An additional point is that for compliance with the EMC 
Directive, the **manufacturer's intention** is crucial. If a user 
decides to extend a USB connection, for example, to 25 m, and it works 
well enough to allow him to use it, the manufacturer has not violated 
the Directive, because he did not *intend* a user to do that.

In some countries, it may be legally wise to *list* the intentions, to 
avoid claims of 'You should have told me (the coffee would be hot)!'.
-- 
OOO - Own Opinions Only. Try www.jmwa.demon.co.uk and www.isce.org.uk
Things can always get better. But that's not the only option.
John Woodgate, J M Woodgate and Associates, Rayleigh, Essex UK

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