You still have to solve the "getting across the border" issue. If I
recall a situation two years ago, we had to get the "demonstratee" to
sign documents in order to get them across the border. Something tells
me that a bond would have been required otherwise. Check with a
Hello,
I have been reviewing the definition of SELV in IEC 950 lately and
have a question that some of you may have answers to.
As I understand it, SELV is defined as voltages less than or equal
to 42.4 Volts Peak or 60 Volts DC. If I convert 42.4 Vp to RMS I get 30
Vrms.
At 09:59 22-09-97 -0400, Mark Urban wrote:
>Is the Australian EMC requirement the same as CE? I guess we're supposed
>to fill out yet another Declaration of Conformity and add another
>"mark". I'm running out of real-estate. Will Australia accept CE?
>
>Thank-you,
>
>Mark Urban
>
Bonjour de Montre
Hello All,
We learned this morning that CENELEC finally has their website up and
running. Their link has just been added to the Safety Link
http://www.safetylink.com
(where you can find more than 400 additional links of interest).
Please visit and check out CENELEC's new, and l
Hi To All,
Thank you to all who responded to my request. The most thorough response was
from tinb...@aol.com.
The answer for me was - yes, we can demo it even at the customer site. That
system must be operated by our employees under all conditions. It must be
labeled with a notice that it is n
Mark Urban wrote:
>
> Is the Australian EMC requirement the same as CE? I guess we're supposed
> to fill out yet another Declaration of Conformity and add another
> "mark". I'm running out of real-estate. Will Australia accept CE?
>
> Thank-you,
>
> Mark Urban
Mark,
Answers in order:
No
Yes, Ye
Scott,
MACHINERY DIRECTIVE
I don't know which Directive your new product falls under, but the Machinery
Directive has specific exclusions dealing with demo products, "Whereas, for
trade fairs, exhibitions, etc., it must be possible to exhibit machinery
which does not conform to this Directive; whe
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