RE: An ESD question

2002-06-12 Thread Gary McInturff

Remember at time testing at a manufacturing location down south. Don't 
know if it was humidity but we were the first to know that a rain storm was 
headed our way. There was a dramatic change in the ESD discharge and response 
characteristics before and during the downpour. Same for a trip in Japan - 
which is very humid to start with.
No attempt to explain - just presenting a couple of experiences.
Wasn't really an obstacle, we were easily able to locate and resolve the 
problem regardless of the outside weather. PS neither of the locations had air 
conducting or humidity control so other than physical raindrops we had the same 
temperature and humidity as outdoors.
I dawns on me, that to work out the variability in weather in Japan we 
moved into their sound chamber, that for some reason did have humidity control 
- not a clue why.
Gary

-Original Message-
From: bogdan matoga [mailto:bogda...@pacbell.net]
Sent: Wednesday, June 12, 2002 12:01 PM
To: Gibling, Vic
Cc: emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
Subject: Re: An ESD question



Vic:
The ambient relative humidity should have no impact on the performance of the
gut but only on the generation of  static charges. So, to improve the
performance in the field, I would suggest that you increase the R.H. at the
customer site(s) to about 50% which would eliminate the generation of
electrostatic charges and consequently the problems. This will give you time to
work on the equipment to minimize ESD susceptibility.
By the way, lower R.H. also occurs at low tamperatures.
Please let me know how things work out.
Bogdan.

Gibling, Vic wrote:

 Dear Group

 I tried to find David Pommerenke article's in the Journal of ESD on the Web
 but alas no downloadable version was found, so may I ask the group a
 question?

 We have an ESD field failure which is occurring in dry hot countries ( no
 surprise )which can be recreated with an ESD of -800V. In an attempt to get
 a high incidence of discharges we used a dehumidifier to create a dry
 environment. The result was a reduction in discharges.

 Thinking the problem through -now- as a dry atmosphere will encourage the
 production of high level ESD and a humid environment inhibits the charge to
 a lesser level, presumably because it 'leaks' away. Then is it wrong for us
 to attempt to 'dry' the local atmosphere in the hope of gaining consistent
 ESD from an ESD gun, that is to say the more humid the environment the more
 efficiently the discharge will transfer to the victim?

 Incidentally, to add to the thread regarding intermediate level testing for
 ESD and EFT. This exercise has revealed different failure mechanisms at
 different ESD levels.

 Your views would be appreciated.

 Vic Gibling
 Compliance Engineer
 Marconi Applied Technologies



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AW: An ESD question

2002-06-12 Thread Pommerenke, David

Dear Group,

In dry conditions, not only the charging processes are enhancec, but the 
severity (less risetime, higher peak current) is enhanced in general. For both 
reasons, it is not uncommen to see ESD problems move around the world with the 
local seasons.

Still, I would always try to debug the problem in contact mode. The effect on 
humidity on the electromagnetic properties is in general very small. Aim of the 
debugging should be to identify the traces, nets of PINs that are effected. 

Locally injecting pulses via direct, capacitive, inductive or differential 
injection has prooved to be an effective tool for achieving this.

David




-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von:Gibling, Vic [mailto:vic.gibl...@marconi.com]
Gesendet:   Mi 12.06.2002 02:26
An: emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
Cc: 
Betreff:An ESD question



Dear Group 

I tried to find David Pommerenke article's in the Journal of ESD on the Web
but alas no downloadable version was found, so may I ask the group a
question?

We have an ESD field failure which is occurring in dry hot countries ( no
surprise )which can be recreated with an ESD of -800V. In an attempt to get
a high incidence of discharges we used a dehumidifier to create a dry
environment. The result was a reduction in discharges. 

Thinking the problem through -now- as a dry atmosphere will encourage the
production of high level ESD and a humid environment inhibits the charge to
a lesser level, presumably because it 'leaks' away. Then is it wrong for us
to attempt to 'dry' the local atmosphere in the hope of gaining consistent
ESD from an ESD gun, that is to say the more humid the environment the more
efficiently the discharge will transfer to the victim?

Incidentally, to add to the thread regarding intermediate level testing for
ESD and EFT. This exercise has revealed different failure mechanisms at
different ESD levels.

Your views would be appreciated.

Vic Gibling
Compliance Engineer
Marconi Applied Technologies

 

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RE: An ESD question

2002-06-12 Thread Chris Maxwell

Fred, et al

Vic's original question asked about test conditions; and that is what the 
responses dealt with.  As a matter of fact, the responses were very focused on 
the question that was asked.  

In the original question, I saw no discussion of the desired compliance level.  
 For all I know, Vic could be testing a bare chip or integrated circuit for 
which a compliance level of 1000V could be sufficient.The come-back which I 
 received, below,  assumes that Vic needs the 4KV, 8KV or higher compliance 
levels typical of most complete products.  That may be true; and I think that 
you bring up an important point that engineers need to focus on proper ESD 
design as well as ESD testing.

So, I consider your message to be worthwhile; even while I consider the 
criticism in its first sentence to be off target.  

Chris Maxwell | Design Engineer - Optical Division
email chris.maxw...@nettest.com | dir +1 315 266 5128 | fax +1 315 797 8024

NetTest | 6 Rhoads Drive, Utica, NY 13502 | USA
web www.nettest.com | tel +1 315 797 4449 | 

 -Original Message-
 From: Fred Townsend [SMTP:f...@poasana.com]
 Sent: Wednesday, June 12, 2002 12:27 PM
 To:   Chris Maxwell
 Cc:   Gibling, Vic; emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
 Subject:  Re: An ESD question
 
 
 It is interesting to see how easy it is to lose focus.  The problem is not 
 the humidity, approach speed, etc. as Richard has suggested.  Yes, they are 
 factors but not the problem.  The problem is a massive design flaw. 800 volts 
 is way too low.  The fact there are multiple failure modes supports the 
 conclusion something major is wrong. The designers needs to review their ESD 
 suppression and grounding of this product. You may need to call in an ESD or 
 SI expert. This product is not ready for prime time.
 
 This discussion would be relevant if we were trying to sneak through a 
 product that passed at 4 KV but failed at 5 KV but not at 0.8KV.
 
 Fred Townsend
 

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Re: An ESD question

2002-06-12 Thread bogdan matoga

Vic:
The ambient relative humidity should have no impact on the performance of the
gut but only on the generation of  static charges. So, to improve the
performance in the field, I would suggest that you increase the R.H. at the
customer site(s) to about 50% which would eliminate the generation of
electrostatic charges and consequently the problems. This will give you time to
work on the equipment to minimize ESD susceptibility.
By the way, lower R.H. also occurs at low tamperatures.
Please let me know how things work out.
Bogdan.

Gibling, Vic wrote:

 Dear Group

 I tried to find David Pommerenke article's in the Journal of ESD on the Web
 but alas no downloadable version was found, so may I ask the group a
 question?

 We have an ESD field failure which is occurring in dry hot countries ( no
 surprise )which can be recreated with an ESD of -800V. In an attempt to get
 a high incidence of discharges we used a dehumidifier to create a dry
 environment. The result was a reduction in discharges.

 Thinking the problem through -now- as a dry atmosphere will encourage the
 production of high level ESD and a humid environment inhibits the charge to
 a lesser level, presumably because it 'leaks' away. Then is it wrong for us
 to attempt to 'dry' the local atmosphere in the hope of gaining consistent
 ESD from an ESD gun, that is to say the more humid the environment the more
 efficiently the discharge will transfer to the victim?

 Incidentally, to add to the thread regarding intermediate level testing for
 ESD and EFT. This exercise has revealed different failure mechanisms at
 different ESD levels.

 Your views would be appreciated.

 Vic Gibling
 Compliance Engineer
 Marconi Applied Technologies



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Re: An ESD question

2002-06-12 Thread Fred Townsend

It is interesting to see how easy it is to lose focus.  The problem is not the 
humidity, approach speed, etc. as Richard has suggested.  Yes, they are factors 
but not the problem.  The problem is a massive design flaw. 800 volts is way 
too low.  The fact there are multiple failure modes supports the conclusion 
something major is wrong. The designers needs to review their ESD suppression 
and grounding of this product. You may need to call in an ESD or SI expert. 
This product is not ready for prime time.

This discussion would be relevant if we were trying to sneak through a product 
that passed at 4 KV but failed at 5 KV but not at 0.8KV.

Fred Townsend

Chris Maxwell wrote:

 Vic,

 I agree, your product is probably seeing field failures because of the dry 
 conditions.  These dry conditions make the probability of an ESD event 
 higher.  This is due to the fact that, as personnel walk across carpets or 
 rub their clothing on chairs, there is no humidity in the air to help bleed 
 and equalize charge.  So, they have a higher probability of charging up and a 
 higher probability of discharging to your equipment.   (You probably already 
 know this.)

 Of course, your problems may not be due to people discharging to your 
 equipment.  It could be due to some other source of ESD.  It could be a 
 discharge from a nearby object.  However, the same argument holds.  The dry 
 atmosphere increases the probability.  (Hence the static cling present in 
 clothes that come out of a dryer.)

 So, in both cases, you are probably seeing more failures in a dry atmosphere 
 because the probability of an ESD event is higher.   Higher failure rates in 
 dry atmospheres are due to this probability increase.  The higher failure 
 rate is probably not due to a dry atmosphere ESD event being different from a 
 humid atmosphere ESD event.

 For testing, you are already generating the ESD event with a simulator.  The 
 ESD generator takes probability out of the equation.  You can generate a 
 discharge whenever you want.  So, in my humble opinion you don't need to 
 simulate the dry conditions.  I would simply follow IEC 1000-4-2, which 
 recommends test conditions with a humidity level between 30% and 60%.   With 
 this combination of ESD generator and humidity, you should get a discharge 
 whenever you want; and it should couple to the victim in proper fashion.

 I agree that you will see different performance at different levels.   I have 
 seen failures at 4KV air discharge that are not repeatable with 8KV air 
 discharge.   So it is worth the time to test at lower levels until you get up 
 to the compliance level that you are shooting for.

 Chris Maxwell | Design Engineer - Optical Division
 email chris.maxw...@nettest.com | dir +1 315 266 5128 | fax +1 315 797 8024

 NetTest | 6 Rhoads Drive, Utica, NY 13502 | USA
 web www.nettest.com | tel +1 315 797 4449 |

  -Original Message-
  From: Gibling, Vic [SMTP:vic.gibl...@marconi.com]
  Sent: Wednesday, June 12, 2002 3:26 AM
  To:   emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
  Subject:  An ESD question
 
 
 
  Dear Group
 
  I tried to find David Pommerenke article's in the Journal of ESD on the Web
  but alas no downloadable version was found, so may I ask the group a
  question?
 
  We have an ESD field failure which is occurring in dry hot countries ( no
  surprise )which can be recreated with an ESD of -800V. In an attempt to get
  a high incidence of discharges we used a dehumidifier to create a dry
  environment. The result was a reduction in discharges.
 
  Thinking the problem through -now- as a dry atmosphere will encourage the
  production of high level ESD and a humid environment inhibits the charge to
  a lesser level, presumably because it 'leaks' away. Then is it wrong for us
  to attempt to 'dry' the local atmosphere in the hope of gaining consistent
  ESD from an ESD gun, that is to say the more humid the environment the more
  efficiently the discharge will transfer to the victim?
 
  Incidentally, to add to the thread regarding intermediate level testing for
  ESD and EFT. This exercise has revealed different failure mechanisms at
  different ESD levels.
 
  Your views would be appreciated.
 
  Vic Gibling
  Compliance Engineer
  Marconi Applied Technologies
 
 
 
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Re: An ESD question

2002-06-12 Thread Doug McKean

As has been pointed out by Mr. Woods, humidity is only 
one of many parameters involved with ESD.  And simulating 
a dry environment in a chamber that's completely lined with 
metal surfaces might not be sufficient for simulating a dry 
customer environment. 

ESD failures at differing levels of voltage is an interesting 
problem since I've had at least two different types of 
failures each with entirely different casues.  

1. A unacceptable hard ESD failure at a level of say  'x KV' 
and any level higher is most likely a grounding problem. To 
lower level 'x KV', look at the grounding setup. 

2. A unacceptable hard ESD failure at a level of say  'x KV' 
but possibly no failure above this until a higher level is 
reached is more a decoupling problem in combination 
with a grounding problem. 

For instance, by a grounding problem I mean ground 
wire too short, improperly placed, ground wire too small, 
maybe braid should be used, maybe a strip of copper 
should be used, and if a braid or strip of copper are being 
used then maybe they're not wide enough, etc etc ... 

By a decoupling problem in combination with a grounding 
problem, I mean the ground problem described above 
in concert with incorrectly sized decoupling caps, the 
decoupling caps are improperly placed, leads too long 
on the caps, wrong sized ferrites if used, improperly 
placed ferrites, etc etc etc ... 

Regards, Doug McKean 



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RE: IEC 61000-4-2 ESD 61000-4-5 Surge lower levels

2002-06-12 Thread Gary McInturff

David,
I would add my voice to the notes below. In particular it was for 
keyboards, and we tested at discrete steps. 2, 4, 6, 8, and then jumped in 4K 
increments to 12, and 16 -  occasionally to 20K for a specific customer 
requirement. HP for example.
We too noted failures at lower levels that did not repeat at higher 
levels. Principally in the 2 to 8K range, because at the higher levels we 
changed the acceptance level from not sending out false codes to just not 
locking up the processor.
These were principally in the air discharge mode - but repeatable 
within the 20 discharges at each test point. 
By the way I enjoyed the article you sent me on the arc length testing 
- it at least gives me insight on why the method is presumed to simulate how an 
actual human/metal ESD event occurs - through air.  The data was presented for 
5 Kv, but I couldn't tell whether it could also be used for different levels.
Sorry, I know from an empirical standpoint you need the data in your 
hands not just recollection of events, but those tests were done for a 
different company - but enough voices saying the same thing provide a strong 
argument for confirming or denying the presumption scientifically. That sounds 
like its right up your professorial ally and lord knows you have to have some 
unwitting undergrads you could trick into the process.
Certainly would be ideal if it did, or that some adjustment mechanism 
could be applied to a simulator for each voltage. That would allow for much 
more automated testing. 
Gary


-Original Message-
From: Scott Douglas [mailto:dougl...@naradnetworks.com]
Sent: Wednesday, June 12, 2002 5:01 AM
To: Pommerenke, David
Cc: EMC-PSTC
Subject: RE: IEC 61000-4-2 ESD  61000-4-5 Surge lower levels



David,

Have been (still am) out of the office testing this week.

I am sorry to say that I cannot provide hard data to support my comments. 
That experience was two lifetimes ago at a different employer. It happened 
on more than one product model and on more than one of each model. I do 
know that we would make 50 discharges at each test point. And, there were 
more than ten test points on each model. Not every test point would exhibit 
the problem, but those that did were consistent, something like 60% of 
discharges would cause the system display to scramble. The peak failure 
voltage was around 1.8 kV, with only a very few failures at 4 kV and none 
at 8 or 15 kV. All were in contact mode.

This was all engineering work prior to official test house testing. We 
identified the problems and made changes and re-tested. Once we got all 
tests to pass, we would go for the official test. We had several of these 
type of problems. Once was the scrambled (actually went black) LCD display. 
Solved by shielding the cable to the display and termination resistors on 
the display PCB. Another time was black lines in the recorded output (film 
recorder products). This was corrected by proper grounding of the I/O 
connector shell. Third time was system hang-up. If I recall this one 
correctly, we added decoupling caps to chassis ground at the I/O connector 
on the mother board. In all cases, the problems were at mid level tests, 
usually 2 or 4 kV, rarely at 8 kV, and never at 15 kV.

Scott


At 08:33 PM 6/10/02 -0500, you wrote:
Dear Scott,

(1)
I have looked at quite a bit of literature that plots

Failure propatibility   vs.  Stress level in contact mode like testing

and have seen very few none-monotonic EUTs that show the none-monotonic 
behavior over a larger voltage range.

(2)
In my five year test practise at HP, I have only seen one EUT that failed 
at lower levels and passed at higher levels in contact mode.


If you have data that showsAs others have said, I have seen numerous 
failures at less than the maximum required test voltage while the same 
system passes at the max required voltage. please share that data with me 
if it is in contact mode and if the number of discharges at each level is 
large enough to obtain an acceptable confidence level.

Regards

David Pommerenke



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This message is from the IEEE 

Shock and Vibration

2002-06-12 Thread Fleury, Bill
Hi All,

Does anyone know what IEC 48D (Secretariat) 76 would be? It is called out
in the IEEE 1386:2001 standard for CMC cards as shock and vibration
requirements. I assumed that IEC 48D was a standard but apparently that is
not the case. SC 48D is a Subcommittee dealing with Mechanical Structures
for Electronic Equipment; so I'm thinking that IEC 48D (Secretariat) 76 is
the proceedings from one of their meetings but I have had no luck in
locating any information about it.
My Marketing gurus are asking me if we meet these requirements but I don't
know what the requirements are; so its kind of hard to give them an answer.
:-)

Thanks for your help.
Bill

***Artesyn Communication Products, LLC**


Bill Fleury Email: bi...@artesyncp.com
Compliance Engineer Phone: 608-826-8375
8310 Excelsior DriveFax:   608-831-8844
Madison, WI 53717


Friends are those people who know the words to the song in your heart and
sing them back to you when you have forgotten the words.
(unattributed)

*** Visit us at www.artesyn.com/cp **
 Bill Fleury (E-mail).vcf 
attachment: Bill_Fleury_(E-mail).vcf


CISPR 17

2002-06-12 Thread Gordon,Ian

All
I have a number of questions concerning specification of mains filters: 
The first is can somebody explain what CISPR 17 is and how it is
used to produce response curves for filters? 
Secondly, manufacturers data for filter response curves refer to
50ohm - 50ohm measurements and unbalanced 100ohm - 0.1ohm curves. Can anyone
tell me how these different impedances are introduced to the system? are
they in series or parallel with the filter input?
Finally, has anybody been able to simulate a common mode emc filter
and reproduce the curves given in manufacturers data?

Thanks

Ian Gordon



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RE: An ESD question

2002-06-12 Thread Chris Maxwell

Vic,

I agree, your product is probably seeing field failures because of the dry 
conditions.  These dry conditions make the probability of an ESD event higher.  
This is due to the fact that, as personnel walk across carpets or rub their 
clothing on chairs, there is no humidity in the air to help bleed and equalize 
charge.  So, they have a higher probability of charging up and a higher 
probability of discharging to your equipment.   (You probably already know 
this.)

Of course, your problems may not be due to people discharging to your 
equipment.  It could be due to some other source of ESD.  It could be a 
discharge from a nearby object.  However, the same argument holds.  The dry 
atmosphere increases the probability.  (Hence the static cling present in 
clothes that come out of a dryer.)

So, in both cases, you are probably seeing more failures in a dry atmosphere 
because the probability of an ESD event is higher.   Higher failure rates in 
dry atmospheres are due to this probability increase.  The higher failure rate 
is probably not due to a dry atmosphere ESD event being different from a humid 
atmosphere ESD event.  

For testing, you are already generating the ESD event with a simulator.  The 
ESD generator takes probability out of the equation.  You can generate a 
discharge whenever you want.  So, in my humble opinion you don't need to 
simulate the dry conditions.  I would simply follow IEC 1000-4-2, which 
recommends test conditions with a humidity level between 30% and 60%.   With 
this combination of ESD generator and humidity, you should get a discharge 
whenever you want; and it should couple to the victim in proper fashion.

I agree that you will see different performance at different levels.   I have 
seen failures at 4KV air discharge that are not repeatable with 8KV air 
discharge.   So it is worth the time to test at lower levels until you get up 
to the compliance level that you are shooting for.

Chris Maxwell | Design Engineer - Optical Division
email chris.maxw...@nettest.com | dir +1 315 266 5128 | fax +1 315 797 8024

NetTest | 6 Rhoads Drive, Utica, NY 13502 | USA
web www.nettest.com | tel +1 315 797 4449 | 




 -Original Message-
 From: Gibling, Vic [SMTP:vic.gibl...@marconi.com]
 Sent: Wednesday, June 12, 2002 3:26 AM
 To:   emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
 Subject:  An ESD question
 
 
 
 Dear Group 
 
 I tried to find David Pommerenke article's in the Journal of ESD on the Web
 but alas no downloadable version was found, so may I ask the group a
 question?
 
 We have an ESD field failure which is occurring in dry hot countries ( no
 surprise )which can be recreated with an ESD of -800V. In an attempt to get
 a high incidence of discharges we used a dehumidifier to create a dry
 environment. The result was a reduction in discharges. 
 
 Thinking the problem through -now- as a dry atmosphere will encourage the
 production of high level ESD and a humid environment inhibits the charge to
 a lesser level, presumably because it 'leaks' away. Then is it wrong for us
 to attempt to 'dry' the local atmosphere in the hope of gaining consistent
 ESD from an ESD gun, that is to say the more humid the environment the more
 efficiently the discharge will transfer to the victim?
 
 Incidentally, to add to the thread regarding intermediate level testing for
 ESD and EFT. This exercise has revealed different failure mechanisms at
 different ESD levels.
 
 Your views would be appreciated.
 
 Vic Gibling
 Compliance Engineer
 Marconi Applied Technologies
 
  
 
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RE: An ESD question

2002-06-12 Thread richwoods

Humidity is not the only variable, and may not be your major variable.
Repeatability of ESD results is a statistical problem. Consider the
variables:
-humidity
-approach speed (for non-contact discharge)
-angle of the probe (for non-contact discharge)
-synchronization of the ESD application with the various logic states of the
EUT
-rise time and peak di/dt variance as applied ESD voltage is changed
-variance between ESD guns

And I am sure there are more variables. The only way one can really
determine a product's real ESD immunity is to apply thousands of hits at
different voltage levels and apply a statistical evaluation. In the end, one
can only say that the equipment is immune to X volts with Y confidence.

Good luck,

Richard Woods
Sensormatic Electronics
Tyco International


-Original Message-
From: Gibling, Vic [mailto:vic.gibl...@marconi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, June 12, 2002 3:26 AM
To: emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
Subject: An ESD question




Dear Group 

I tried to find David Pommerenke article's in the Journal of ESD on the Web
but alas no downloadable version was found, so may I ask the group a
question?

We have an ESD field failure which is occurring in dry hot countries ( no
surprise )which can be recreated with an ESD of -800V. In an attempt to get
a high incidence of discharges we used a dehumidifier to create a dry
environment. The result was a reduction in discharges. 

Thinking the problem through -now- as a dry atmosphere will encourage the
production of high level ESD and a humid environment inhibits the charge to
a lesser level, presumably because it 'leaks' away. Then is it wrong for us
to attempt to 'dry' the local atmosphere in the hope of gaining consistent
ESD from an ESD gun, that is to say the more humid the environment the more
efficiently the discharge will transfer to the victim?

Incidentally, to add to the thread regarding intermediate level testing for
ESD and EFT. This exercise has revealed different failure mechanisms at
different ESD levels.

Your views would be appreciated.

Vic Gibling
Compliance Engineer
Marconi Applied Technologies

 

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SV: mains leads with integral ferrites

2002-06-12 Thread h . knudsen

Hello Chris,

Try Kabelverk Eupen AG http://www.eupen.com/
They have a number of types, the site is down for the moment but try later.

Best regards

Helge Knudsen
Test  Approval manager
Niros Telecommunication
Hirsemarken 5
DK-3520 Farum
Denmark
Tel +45 44 34 22 51
Fax +45 44 99 28 08
email h.knud...@niros.com



-Oprindelig meddelelse-
Fra: Colgan, Chris [mailto:chris.col...@tagmclaren.com]
Sendt: 11. juni 2002 11:16
Til: 'Emc-Pstc' (E-mail)
Emne: mains leads with integral ferrites



Hello

Can anyone send me details of manufacturers or suppliers of the above?

Cheers

Chris Colgan
Compliance Engineer
TAG McLaren Audio Ltd
The Summit, Latham Road
Huntingdon, Cambs, PE29 6ZU
*Tel: +44 (0)1480 415 627
*Fax: +44 (0)1480 52159
* Mailto:chris.col...@tagmclaren.com
* http://www.tagmclaren.com



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be subject to acceptance by TAG McLaren Audio Limited on its 
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contract for the sale and purchase of the products ordered to the
exclusion of any other terms and conditions.

TAG McLaren Audio Ltd
The Summit, 11 Latham Road
Huntingdon, Cambs, PE29 6ZU
Telephone : 01480 415600 (+44 1480 415600)
Facsimile : 01480 52159 (+44 1480 52159)

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An ESD question

2002-06-12 Thread Gibling, Vic


Dear Group 

I tried to find David Pommerenke article's in the Journal of ESD on the Web
but alas no downloadable version was found, so may I ask the group a
question?

We have an ESD field failure which is occurring in dry hot countries ( no
surprise )which can be recreated with an ESD of -800V. In an attempt to get
a high incidence of discharges we used a dehumidifier to create a dry
environment. The result was a reduction in discharges. 

Thinking the problem through -now- as a dry atmosphere will encourage the
production of high level ESD and a humid environment inhibits the charge to
a lesser level, presumably because it 'leaks' away. Then is it wrong for us
to attempt to 'dry' the local atmosphere in the hope of gaining consistent
ESD from an ESD gun, that is to say the more humid the environment the more
efficiently the discharge will transfer to the victim?

Incidentally, to add to the thread regarding intermediate level testing for
ESD and EFT. This exercise has revealed different failure mechanisms at
different ESD levels.

Your views would be appreciated.

Vic Gibling
Compliance Engineer
Marconi Applied Technologies

 

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RE: DOC Assembled from tested components

2002-06-12 Thread Gregg Kervill

No but there have been several companies in the UK that were closed down by
Enforcement Offices until they corrected Safety and EMC defects that they
were discovered. Another company voluntarily ceased production for 6v months
whilst tooling was modified.

Best regards

Gregg



Gregg Kervill DipIM, MIMgt, MIEEE

VP Engineering
Test4Safety.com Inc
PO Box 310,
Reedville, VA
22539. USA

Phone  ( 804) 453-3141
Fax(804) 453-9039



--Original Message-
-From: owner-emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
-[mailto:owner-emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org]On Behalf Of John Juhasz
-Sent: Tuesday, June 11, 2002 8:31 AM
-To: 'Gonzalez, Kenneth P (Rocky)'
-Cc: emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
-Subject: RE: DOC Assembled from tested components
-
-
-
-Rocky,
-
-While your message indicates that the FCC may not have a problem
-with the 'assembled from tested components' concept, it does not
-mean that the end-product will actually meet the limits.
-Poor routing of internal cables, insufficient grounding, just to
-mention a couple of items, can cause failures. This is why
-the EC doesn't have faith CE + CE = CE.
-Although it may work in some cases, it doesn't compare to
-actual testing. If you're going to 'mass produce' a particular
-configuration, take some time and check the emissions.
-You might surprised what you find. In the long run it doesn't
-pay to be 'dollar wise and pound foolish'.
-
-Just my opinion.
-
-GE Interlogix
-
-John A. Juhasz
-Fiber Options Div.
-Bohemia, NY
-
-
-
- All,
- Has anyone successfully issued a DOC using the
-assembled from
-tested components method for a personal computer?  I have not
-been able to
-find a floppy disk drive manufacturer that has any DOC
-documentation for
-their device; even the ones marketing directly to home users.
-Have I just
-not found the right manufacturer?
-
- Best regards,
-
- Rocky
-   -)-(-
-
- Kenneth P. Gonzalez (Rocky)
- Intergraph Solutions Group
- Integrated Products Division
- 170 Graphics Drive
- Madison, Alabama, USA 35758
- phone (256) 730-2131
- fax  (256)730-2424
- kpgon...@ingr.com
-

-This message is from the IEEE EMC Society Product Safety
-Technical Committee emc-pstc discussion list.
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