It certainly depends on how you rate the product, and what "ratings" 
really means.  Typically the voltage rating would be marked on the 
nameplate of the product, but some agencies will go look in the often 
embellished specifications in the operator manual for the voltage range. 

Some auto-ranging power supplies mark the a.c. input as a list of nominal 
voltages, as in "100/120/220/240V". 
_______________________________________________________________________________ 


Ralph McDiarmid  |   Schneider Electric   |  Solar Business  |   CANADA  | 
  Regulatory Compliance Engineering 




From:
Brian Oconnell <[email protected]>
To:
[email protected], 
Date:
12/03/2012 08:55 AM
Subject:
Re: [PSES] IEC 60601-1-2 autoranging supplies



Rated by test certificate and CB report, or by the sales dept-infected 
spec
sheet?

That is, what is the rating on the unit's label?

You can configure most variacs to provide well above the input voltage, 
but
this may do strange stuff to the source impendence. Use a really really
really big variac, or use an electronic source (Ametek, Chroma, etc).

Brian

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]On Behalf Of David
Sent: Monday, December 03, 2012 8:21 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: IEC 60601-1-2 autoranging supplies

All,

IEC 60601-1-2 requires surge, burst, and dropouts be done at the maximum 
and
minimum rated voltages for autoranging supplies.  We typically test at 90
Vac and 240 Vac.  Many supplies I see now are rated up to 264 Vac though.
Is anyone testing at 264V?  Are there variacs out there to bump the input
voltage, since our generator can't go much above 240?

Thanks,

David

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