Piotr,

This topic illustrates a concept that can be called the "supremacy of 
practicality".

I agree with you that the RoHS directive calls for "No ... (unique 
identification of the EEE):" in the DoC. What I have learned is that the EU 
legislation as a collective is not really sure what this means, exactly.

There appear to be two/three sides battling. Side 1 - people who think each 
product unit should have a unique number and that should be placed in a unique 
DoC for that particular unit. Side 2 - people who think only a general product 
descriptor (e.g., model name) should be required in the DoC. Side 3 - people 
who think a DoC can cover several unique units provided the unit number range 
(serial number range) is expressed in the DoC.

Currently both the Low Voltage Directive and the EMC Directive are being 
recast. You can observe parliament and the council struggling with this issue. 
Here, for example, is an excerpt from a current mid-process document for the 
EMC Directive recast regarding the requirements for the DoC.

Commission Proposal - " No ... (unique identification of the apparatus): "
Parliament Position - "No ... (identification of the apparatus):"
Council Position - "Product/Apparatus (product, batch, type or serial number )"
Expected compromise/outcome -> [Council Position]

As long as DoCs reasonably express the identification of covered products, I 
think in the current legislative environment, any practical solution will be 
acceptable. There is certainly enough evidence that 1 - there is a preference 
that one DoC be provided for all applicable directives (rather than a separate 
DoC for each applicable directive) and 2 - directives are not completely 
harmonized on how the covered product(s) must be identified.
====

50581 allows "supplier declarations, confirming that the restricted substance 
content of the material, part, or sub-assembly is within the permitted levels 
and identifying any exemptions that have been applied." - I think an invoice 
from a supplier stating the provided resistors could qualify as a such a 
declaration, provided they mention exemptions used, if any.
====

Regarding your carrots and fish.... I am sympathetic to your surprise. I think 
the EEE definition has some severe problems and in the "cold light of day" 
would include CDs and perhaps even paper manuals (which require light to be 
legible), but there are also legal principles that suggest laws, no matter how 
they are worded, must be interpreted reasonably. I think the FAQ has provided 
some good boundaries on reasonable interpretation with Q7.2.

Regards,
Lauren Crane
KLA-Tencor

From: Piotr Galka [mailto:piotr.ga...@micromade.pl]
Sent: Tuesday, November 19, 2013 10:02 AM
To: EMC-PSTC; Crane, Lauren
Subject: Re: [PSES] EN 50581 part/range of parts

Lauren and others,

I have read (I believe carefully) this FAQ.

>From Q8.14 and Directive Article 7(g) I see that product identification can be 
>batch number. For my understanding it is not "unique identification" called in 
>Annex VI. But OK let it be, I don't care because my products have unique 
>numbers.

Q8.9 says that DoC would reference the product normally by the model number. I 
don't believe that ANNEX VI 1. "No....(unique identification of EEE):" means 
model number, but I must all the time suppose that I don't understand English 
good enough.
Can someone tell me if unique identification of EEE can really be understand as 
model number ? I really don't believe!
If FAQ is in opposite to directive itself than I must remember of FAQ Preface: 
"These FAQ reflect the views of DG Environment and as such are not legally 
binding: binding interpretation of EU legislation is the exclusive competence 
of the Court of Justice of the European Union."
I still don't know if I have to issue separate DoC for each device (I have not 
batch numbers, but individual numbers).

Q8.10 and Q9.6 directs me to EN 50581 to get presumption of conformity so it 
still looks that I need the declaration for each 100pcs of resistors I will 
order. I don't think that order saying that I order ROHS2 compliant parts and 
invoice saying that they are ROHS2 can be understand as "signed contract" which 
would allow me not to have supplier declaration.
How high is in your opinion probability that if Court of Justice of European 
Union will have to decide if such order and such invoice can really be 
understand as signed contract than they will say "yes". It would help a lot if 
I could believe it is around 95%, but unfortunately (based on my understanding 
of English) I believe it is around 0%.

The most surprising for me is the Q7.2.
I knew that:
- carrot is the fruit,
- snail is the fish,
- Poland, Germany and some other countries have no access to the sea,
and it looks that I should add to that list that:
- light is not electromagnetic field.

Best Regards
Piotr Galka


----- Original Message -----
From: Crane, Lauren<mailto:lauren.cr...@kla-tencor.com>
To: Piotr Galka<mailto:piotr.ga...@micromade.pl> ; 
EMC-PSTC@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG<mailto:EMC-PSTC@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG>
Sent: Friday, November 15, 2013 2:22 AM
Subject: RE: [PSES] EN 50581 part/range of parts

Piotr,

Reading the EU Commission's FAQ on RoHS2 might help you 
http://ec.europa.eu/environment/waste/rohs_eee/pdf/faq.pdf.
Components (i.e. things not intended for direct sale to the end user) are not 
considered to be in scope of RoHS (even though they fit the definition of EEE). 
It has to do with the concept of "finished product".

So, if you are going to be using the 100pcs of resistors in your product, you 
should constrain your supplier with a contract that requires them to be RoHS 
compliant, but you do not need a DoC from them.

Regards,
Lauren Crane
KLA-Tencor

From: Piotr Galka [mailto:piotr.ga...@micromade.pl]
Sent: Wednesday, November 13, 2013 8:27 AM
To: EMC-PSTC@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG<mailto:EMC-PSTC@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG>
Subject: [PSES] EN 50581 part/range of parts

To English language standard experts,

How do you understand "specific part" and "specific range of parts" in last 
sentence in EN 50581:2012 Cl. 4.3.3 (a):
"Such declarations ... shall cover a specific ... part ... or a specific range 
of ... parts..."

According to:
- directives understanding of putting product on the market (not type but 
single piece),
- direct meaning of the words (as I fill them),
it looks that:
part = this one single part,
range of parts = some (specified) number of the same type parts.

If it is true I see problems with ROHS DoC.
If I buy 100pcs of 0603 1k resistors should I ask the supplier for sending me 
the declaration for specified range of these 100pcs ?
And the same for all 200 other types of elements ?

The other way of understanding is:
part = part type (resistor 0603 1k)
range of parts = range of part types (resistor 0603 from 1ohm to 10Mohm)

This looks more logical for someone trying to make ROHS DoC but:
If they wonted to say "part type" or "range of part types" they would certainly 
said that. As they didn't said that I think they had the previous understanding 
in mind.

What is the solution I don't see ?

Best Regards
Piotr Galka
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