To answer your final question, 62368-1 is indeed for home use as well as
everywhere else. 60335-1 is for 'appliances', which used to be
non-electronic, e.g. washing machines, toasters, vacuum cleaners.
Best wishes
John Woodgate OOO-Own Opinions Only
J M Woodgate and Associates www.woodjohn.uk
://sulisconsultants.com/
Registered in England and Wales, number 05466247
From: Matthew Wilson | GBE
Sent: 24 October 2019 22:38
To: EMC-PSTC@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG
Subject: Re: [PSES] Power supply 60335 or 60950...
Thank you all for your replies, much appreciated. I do offer apologies for the
use
standard.
Ted Eckert
Microsoft Corporation
The opinions expressed are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of my
employer.
From: Matthew Wilson | GBE
Sent: Thursday, October 24, 2019 2:38 PM
To: EMC-PSTC@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG
Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [PSES] Power supply 60335 or 60950...
Thank you
Thank you all for your replies, much appreciated. I do offer apologies for the
use of ‘jack plug’ and ‘jack socket’ which of course suggests a non-suitable
connector akin to ‘headphone jack’. Quite righty as pointed out not a good idea
at all. I remember a long time ago wrecking a Sinclair
One other consideration that I left out concerning "non-60335" PSU.
EMC. Your 60950-1 PSU won't satisfy your LVD CE requirements in the EU
after 2020 because it's being withdrawn. If your client is forced to
move to a new model PSU later then they should repeat at least the AC
mains-related
Another couple of comments concerning your PSU choice:
I was told recently by a NRTL GMA pro that 62368-1 is not yet being
accepted in China and Taiwan. Accepted worldwide apart from those two
at the moment. So your global plans, if any, should be considered.
Also, I just recently
To: EMC-PSTC@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG
Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [PSES] Power supply 60335 or 60950...
Since it works with a phone, 62368-1 applies. I would not rely on 60950-1
because of the incidence of fires and electric shock. Bedrooms and nurseries
are especially sensitive locations. Also, note
Since it works with a phone, 62368-1 applies. I would not rely on
60950-1 because of the incidence of fires and electric shock. Bedrooms
and nurseries are especially sensitive locations. Also, note that a jack
plug is shorted when inserting or withdrawing. That is why the
concentric
A client has a product, to be used by consumers typically in a bedroom or
child's nursery, which has a microcontroller and is Wi-Fi enabled so it can
present data to 'the cloud' and interact with a mobile phone 'app' to change
some parameters on the device. We have been asked by the client
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