Scott:

I think you are correct, but for the wrong reasons.  

As I understand your product, it apparently is a small IR detector circuit 
(board?) which will 
be sold to an OEM for incorporation into their product such as a TV for use in 
changing channels, 
etc.. In all probability, the power for your unit is provided by the OEM, so 
you unit is sold without 
a power supply or battery. 

Therefore, you would not need to have an EMC Certification on the unit itself.  
However, you may 
be required to make sure it does not cause the OEM’s product to NOT comply with 
the applicable 
EMC Requirements.

Hopefully I have described your product and your marketing position 
sufficiently.

Regards, 

John Shinn, P.E.
Retired


From: Scott Douglas 
Sent: Wednesday, July 17, 2013 7:43 PM
To: Grace Lin 
Cc: Bill Owsley ; [email protected] 
Subject: Re: EMC Required?

Grace and Bill,

Here is an excerpt from the FCC Rules:

15.3  Definitions

(k) Digital device. (Previously defined as a computing device). An 
unintentional radiator (device or system) that generates and uses timing 
signals or pulses at a rate in excess of 9,000 pulses (cycles) per second and 
uses digital techniques;


Semantic argument coming. My device previously described does not generate the 
pulses. It may transform these pulses but does not generate (create) them. 
Reading the sentence above the operative terms are generates AND uses. And, 
because of the AND, since we do not generate then it makes no difference if we 
use the signals. My translation is we do not generate therefore Part 15 does 
not apply to this specific product.

Okay, Kevlar donned, looking for arguments.

Best to all,
Scott






On 7/15/2013 4:38 AM, Grace Lin wrote:

  Bill and Scott,

  Since the operating frequency is higher than 9 kHz, FCC Part 15, Subpart 
B-Unintentional Radiators applies.  It is my understanding that an IR device 
doesn't need certification.

  I hope this helps.

  Best regards,
  Grace Lin



  On Fri, Jul 12, 2013 at 9:51 PM, Bill Owsley <[email protected]> wrote:

    For the USA, any electrical signal above 9 kHz meets the requirement to be 
tested.
    I think we will find similar for the EU.  
    EN 300 330, or 300 440, or something like that.
    It has power and a switch and generates frequencies above the lower limit - 
it gets tested.
    ps. that means the device will need to be activated into its operating 
condition for testing.
    But if there is an exclusion list... I'm very interested!



--------------------------------------------------------------------------

      From: Scott Douglas <[email protected]>
      To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> 

      Sent: Friday, July 12, 2013 9:47 AM
      Subject: EMC Required?


      Hi folks,

      Consider a simple circuit. IR diode, a transistor or two, some resistors 
      and caps. Receives input from IR remote, converts to electrical and 
      sends down a wire. No clock in the thing so you could call is passive. 
      But does it need EMC testing for US or EU? The IR signal will be in the 
      35-50 kHz range so pulses down the wire will be the same. Does this make 
      it fit within the realm of EMC required? The device is sold by itself 
      without other products, but is always connected to something else in 
      use. Something else could be a wide variety of anything. I think of it 
      like a stand-alone audio speaker. Purely a passive device that is driven 
      by signals that fall within the EMC required realm. So do you do EMC or 
not?

      Looking forward to your opinions on this.

      Scott

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