RE: EMC requirements for New Zealand

1996-10-30 Thread Tony Fredriksson
...and will Australia accept the "C-Tick" Marking? tony_fredriks...@netpower.com -- From: sbtan To: emc-pstc Subject: EMC requirements for New Zealand List-Post: emc-pstc@listserv.ieee.org Date: Wednesday, October 30, 1996 5:23PM Hi All, Understanding that with effect from 1 Jan 97, p

Is the EU concerned about Cadmium coated parts/connectors?

1996-10-30 Thread Terry J. Meck
Hello again: Thanks for your input in the past! I have a question about Cadmium. One of our engineers was talking to a vendor about our changing shielding requirments and as an incidental part of the conversation was told they have been requested to stop using cadmium coated connectors due to an

Re: IEC1000-4-3: Class A vs. Class D

1996-10-30 Thread Pat Lawler
At 06:16 PM 10/30/96 +0800, Alfred Lo wrote: >May I tell you that harmonic standard is IEC1000-3-2, but not >IEC1000-4-3, it is a radiated immunity standard. My mistake: I _am_ asking about IEC1000-3-2. I've also been looking at other IEC1000 standards lately (-3-3, -4-2, -4-5, -4-11, -4-12). Th

IEC 617 Symbol for Filters?

1996-10-30 Thread John F. Dudek
Does anyone know if an IEC 617 symbol exists for EMI / RFI filters? Thanks in advance. John Dudek, Manager Corcom Inc Product Safety Engineering

EMC requirements for New Zealand

1996-10-30 Thread Jasmine Tan (Technical Coordinator)
Hi All, Understanding that with effect from 1 Jan 97, products entering Australia, require to fufill to EMC requirements. Both New Zealand & Australia is sharing the same standard ie AS/NZS 3548 I am wondering does it implies that EMC requirements for New Zealand will take effect on 1st Jan 97

IEC1000-4-3: Class A vs. Class D

1996-10-30 Thread Pat Lawler
I'm trying to determine what harmonic emission limits our 200W power supplies need to comply with. IEC1000-4-3 has a flow chart that selects the limits based on the application. Since our products are used in ITE and ISM applications, I skip through the flowchart sections dealing with three-phase

Standards for Electric Scales

1996-10-30 Thread Paul Grabowski
The safety Standard UL uses in the USA for evaluating scales is UL 466, Electric Scales. Scales that have electronic computing features such as grocery scales may also be evaluated in the USA to UL 1950, the Standard for Information Technology Equipment, Including Electrical Business Equipment.