Hi Richard,

 

I'm assuming that by "magnetically conductive" you mean having a significant
permeability.  That's certainly a concern, but when you introduce a
conductive but non-magnetic material in to the field, there is an
opportunity for it to act as a shorted turn on the system, so keep
conductive bits small.

 

Best regards sir!

 

Brent (headed home to Colorado) DeWitt

 

From: Richard Georgerian <[email protected]> 
Sent: Monday, May 13, 2019 4:37 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [PSES] IEC 61000-4-9: Section 7.3 - use of a non-conductive table

 

Greeting colleagues,

 

In IEC 61000-4-9, Section 7.3 it states the following -

"Table-top EUT's shall be placed on a non-conductive table."

 

Up until now, I have always thought that "non-conductive" had meant no
metals, such as iron, steel, aluminum, copper, etc. In that meaning, the
table would then be made of wood, foam, etc. However, I have been advised
that for this particular case of impulse magnetic field immunity test, that
"non-conductive" is referring to material that should not be magnetic
conductive, such as aluminum or copper. Iron and steel would not be used, as
these are considered magnetic conductive. And therefore, an aluminum or
copper sheet would be placed on the table under the EUT.

 

The standard does not provide guidance as to the use of "non-conductive"
that would mean in essence, "should not be magnetic conductive".

 

Any guidance and insight would be most helpful.

 

Thank-you,

 

Richard Georgerian

Applications Engineer

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