Hello (again) World Wide Regulatory Knowledge Base,
What are the regulatory/certification requirements if any for Wireless LAN
(2.4 GHz) 802.11B in China, Brazil and Chile?
RICK LINFORD
rlinf...@sonicwall.com
This message is from the IEEE EMC Society Product Safety
Technical Committee emc-
:--) Plus, isn't Chinese the most-spoken language in the world?
[I am sure I will be corrected if wrong!]
;--) So having everyone else change to Chinese would inconvenience the
least number of people?
best regards, glyn
This message is from the IEEE EMC Society Product Safety
Technic
Jeffrey,
For South American Approvals or any International Approvals, there are two
EXPERTS you can contact at TUV Rheinland in Pleasanton, as follows:
Ms. Joyce E. Nixon
International Approvals Coordinator
TUV Rheinland of North America
Telecom Division
1279 Quarry Lane, Suite A
Pleasant
Thanks to all that replied.
One comment: I looked at a manual from
a similar product and in their manual
ONLY the Manf name and address is listed.
They did NOT include a person or a title.
I guess that was the thrust of my question.
I am trying to understand the details of the
requirement.
Is a
Charles,
The FCC requires the "responsible party" for compliance to be located in
the US. Thus the "responsible party" will be:
* Responsible for every unit that is marketed.
* The manufacturer, if they are located in the US.
* An importer who brings the units into the US.
* An assembler in t
I am wondering if any of you have had experience using a current probe to
inject current into a power line for a modified MIL-STD-461 CS101 test?
I am trying to envision how I am going to run CS101 on a 150 Amp system
without blowing up the test equipment amplifiers. I cannot use two
identical t
Charles:
When I was doing compliance for an employer, I always used my name, as
Director of Regulatory Compliance. That way, any FCC correspondence would come
to me instead of being lost on the desk of some executive who was clueless as
to what the correspondence meant.
Regards,
Jacob Z. Scha
Hello All:
I have been studying the new 2000 edition of K.20, "Resistibility of
Telecommunication Equipment Installed in a Telecommunication Centre to
Overvoltages and Overcurrents." There appears to be an important change from
the previous edition that will have a big impact on line interfac
I read in !emc-pstc that Pete Perkins wrote (in
<01c304f8$70d7d7a0$78d5c6ac@oemcomputer>) about 'EN61010-1, Symbol
14' on Thu, 17 Apr 2003:
> As an alternative, perhaps this group would work on the use of a
>universal, worldwide language (English, for instance) which would take care
>of this
Hi all,
The FCC requires the name and address for the
responsible party. (akin to the EU signatory for
the DoC) . Who would that be??
Best Regards
Charles Grasso
Senior Compliance Engineer
Echostar Communications Corp.
Tel: 303-706-5467
Fax: 303-799-6222
Cell: 303-204-2974
Email: charles.gra.
Hi Richard:
> As you say, this web site provides a discussion on the exclamation symbol.
> However, the discussion is slanted in one direction that not everyone in
the
> safety fraternity would necessarily subscribe to. For instance, I have
seen
> the 'high voltage flash' sign used a
Jeff,
One possible contact is:
Benjamim Da Silva Medeiros c. Galvao
EMC Manager
Integration and Testing Laboratory
Instituto Nacional De Pesquisas Espaciais
benja...@lit.inpe.br (e-mail)
(55) 12 3945-6275 (phone)
(55) 12 3941-1884 (fax)
The Brazilian space agency EMC lab doesn't test very many
Richard, et al;
The use of 'universal' markings continues to be controversial. In
order for markings to be universally accepted there needs to be considerable
training as to the correct interpretation as to what the symbol means. This
has been confirmed by several studies. Adding any symbol
Rich,
As you say, this web site provides a discussion on the exclamation symbol.
However, the discussion is slanted in one direction that not everyone in the
safety fraternity would necessarily subscribe to. For instance, I have seen
the 'high voltage flash' sign used as a symbol in an internet
All,
There will be a Northeast Product Safety Society meeting next week on
Wednesday, April 23rd, at EMC Corporation's Customer Briefing Center at
42 South Street in Hopkinton, MA. A social hour with light refreshments
will begin at 7:00 PM and the technical meeting will start at 7:30 PM.
This m
Group,
Are you aware of any changes in Brazil telecom requirements effective in
August of 2003, that will require: "Conducted Emissions on the Telecom
ports" ? I'm currently using Res. 237 Nov 2002 for Cat-3 Equipment. ( EMC
emissions and Conducted emissions on the Pwr Line)
Also, can anyone recom
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