When it comes to EMC performance, almost any component can become critical; so 
your entire Bill of Material plus your assembly drawings become critical. That 
is why you must insure that your production is compliant. You are not only 
verifying that the parts make up a compliant device but the way your product is 
produced is compliant. Any change in components and/or the assembly process 
needs to be reviewed by someone who is qualified to determine if the change may 
affect compliance and have the change tested prior if necessary.

In the old days we used to have our products witness tested for EMC by a VDE 
engineer to get the GS mark. These engineers would generate the test report and 
include pictures and a list of all the sub assemblies. This is the closest 
thing to a critical component list I have seen in EMC reports.

Of course, if shielded cables, power cords, or special installation 
instructions are required to insure compliance then this information should be 
included in the EMC test report.

The Other Brian

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Scott Xe
Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2013 11:49 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Critical component in EMC report

It is common not to have critical component list in EMC reports issued from 3rd 
party laboratories.  Those information are essential to track if the correct 
parts to be used in mass production.  What is main reason not to have it as a 
common practice in the field?

Thanks and regards,

Scott
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