forwarding for Ed Rauch.

____________________Reply Separator____________________
Subject:    RE: Safety testing for 48 VDC powered ITE Equipment
Author: ed.ra...@marconi.com
List-Post: emc-pstc@listserv.ieee.org
Date:       5/19/00 3:32 PM



Also, your end customer could submit his equipment to UL 1950/ EN60950 and will
need his components (your equipment) to be certified by a third party to be
compliant to the standards.




"Grant, Tania (Tania)" <tgr...@lucent.com> on 05/19/2000 01:27:25 PM

Please respond to "Grant, Tania (Tania)" <tgr...@lucent.com>

To:   EMC-PSTC <emc-p...@ieee.org>, "'Andrews, Kurt'" <kandr...@tracewell.com>
cc:    (bcc: Ed Rauch/MAIN/MC1)

Subject:  RE: Safety testing for 48 VDC powered ITE Equipment





Kurt,

Be careful.    The LVD might exempt your equipment; however, if your 48 Vdc
ITE has TNV connections, then you need to meet, per the old Telco or the new
RTTE Directive,  the "essential requirements" of safety, which are presumed
to be met by compliance to EN60950.   Alternatively, you can provide other
proof that you meet the "essential requirements."    Believe me, it is
easier to comply with EN60950 than provide this alternate proof!    If your
48Vdc ITE equipment is NOT connected to TNV circuits then, by the book, you
can consider it as falling outside the scope of the LVD.    However, I
believe that this is a foolish position to take;-- you should take a look at
the European liability laws and then decide whether you want to hide under
LVD dc limit exemption.

The EN60950:1992, incorporating Amendments 1 through 5,  states that it is
applicable to mains-powered or battery-powered ITE,  "...with a rated
voltage not exceeding 600 V."     Note that there is no mention of a minimum
voltage, whether ac or dc.

Thus, the ITE standard does not exempt you, however, the LVD does, assuming
you want to take up this exemption.

Tania Grant, tgr...@lucent.com <mailto:tgr...@lucent.com>
Lucent Technologies, Intelligent Network Unit
Messaging Solutions Group


----------
From:  Andrews, Kurt [SMTP:kandr...@tracewell.com]
Sent:  Friday, May 19, 2000 10:04 AM
To:  EMC-PSTC
Subject:  Safety testing for 48 VDC powered ITE Equipment


I'm looking for information as to what is required as far as safety testing
for a piece of 48 VDC powered ITE Equipment. All outputs will be 12 VDC or
less. This is a commercial unit and will not be sold to consumers.

In Europe it would fall outside the scope of the LVD as it starts at 75V for
DC powered equipment and this will be powered by 48 VDC.

Does anyone know if there any other safety standards required in Europe for
this type of equipment?

It does appear that safety testing and listing is required by OSHA for use
in a U.S. workplace. According to OSHA Standard 1910 Subpart S all "electric
utilization equipment" is required to be "approved" which in most cases
means Listing by a NRTL. In 1920.399 OSHA defines "electric utilization
equipment" as equipment which uses electrical energy for mechanical,
chemical, heating, lighting, or similar useful purpose. My interpretation of
this is that any equipment which uses electricity, AC or DC, would need to
be tested and Listed.

Is my interpretation of the OSHA requirements correct?

What about requirements for Canada?

Any insights into these questions would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks,

Kurt Andrews
Compliance Engineer
Tracewell Systems, Inc.
567 Enterprise Dr.
Westerville, OH 43081
Ph. 614-846-6175
Fax 614-846-7791
Email: kandr...@tracewell.com

-------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------
This message is from the IEEE EMC Society Product Safety
Technical Committee emc-pstc discussion list.

To cancel your subscription, send mail to:
     majord...@ieee.org
with the single line:
     unsubscribe emc-pstc

For help, send mail to the list administrators:
     Jim Bacher:              jim_bac...@mail.monarch.com
     Michael Garretson:        pstc_ad...@garretson.org

For policy questions, send mail to:
     Richard Nute:           ri...@ieee.org

Reply via email to