as a result of receiving this
material or for any consequence of its use.
From: Amund Westin [mailto:am...@westin-emission.no]
Sent: Friday, 8 March 2013 8:33 PM
To: EMC-PSTC@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG
Subject: [PSES] AS/NZS 60950.1 - Austrlian safety requirements
Is safety testing for Australian
@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG
Subject: [PSES] AS/NZS 60950.1 - Austrlian safety requirements
Is safety testing for Australian market according to AS/NZS 60950.1
mandatory, even if the product is powered with 24VDC? I have been told so ….
To be more precise:
The product (EUT) gets it power 24VDC/0.1A from
In message 46a576a1-bb8a-4c98-a92d-ba0c691b3...@yahoo.com, dated Mon,
11 Mar 2013, Peter Merguerian pmerguerian2...@yahoo.com writes:
Thanks for the correction. Too many standards to remember and no mobile
app yet to facilitate the life of a traveling regulatory compliance
professional.
You
.
From: Peter Merguerian [mailto:pmerguerian2...@yahoo.com]
Sent: Tuesday, 12 March 2013 12:33 AM
To: Kevin Richardson
Cc: Amund Westin; EMC-PSTC@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG
Subject: Re: [PSES] AS/NZS 60950.1 - Austrlian safety requirements
Kevin
Thanks for the correction. Too many standards
Is safety testing for Australian market according to AS/NZS 60950.1
mandatory, even if the product is powered with 24VDC? I have been told so ..
To be more precise:
The product (EUT) gets it power 24VDC/0.1A from an AC/DC (230VAC/24VDC)
power supply, which is IEC60950-1 tested and approved
Amund
Power Supply is prescribed and must undergo a certification process.
EUT is not perscribed and does not have to undergo a certification process. It
must however meet AS/NZS 3280 which is very similar to the LVD. One way to
comply is to use a standard such as AS/NZS 60950.1
Best Regards
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