RE: R&TTE Directive Notification PeriodAs always, people are pragmatic, and
technical reasons, how valid they may be, cannot prevail
over legal ones. Any compliance matter will (-in case of dispute-) finally
be judged by
a legal specialist, not a technical-, and if in the end you manage to
convince a lawyer
that A equals B, he will ask you why calling it A anyway.

Furthermore , many technical properties of radio devices nowadays depend
heavily of software, such as the modulation scheme. If your previous uP
served
well to extremes of the test range, does the newer one ??
Your reasoning Richard, and Kevin would do well for submitting your device
to
a test house, as a motivation for no in-hour pre-compliance testing, but not
for safeguarding your boss or customers against legal charges. Sorry...


Regards,

Gert Gremmen, (Ing)
Ce-test, qualified testing

==================================
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CE-shop http://www.cetest.nl/ce_shop.htm
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  -----Original Message-----
  From: owner-emc-p...@ieee.org [mailto:owner-emc-p...@ieee.org]On Behalf Of
Wismer, Sam
  Sent: Thursday, January 11, 2001 7:42 PM
  To: Kevin Harris; EMC-PSTC (E-mail)
  Subject: RE: R&TTE Directive Notification Period


  Hi Kevin,

  Unless you give it the same model number etc., there will always be what
appears to someone who tries to check on it, an un-notified(is that a word?)
product on the market.  I suppose you could have notified a family of
products if you had visibility of them prior to the initial notification.

  It's a bit like adding a new antenna to a spread spectrum device here in
the US.  If the antenna is of the same type and equal or lesser gain than
one that has already been approved by the FCC, then you don't have to test
it.  However, you do have to identify it.  This means you have to file a
class 2 permissive change to add the antenna to the file and wait the 12
week cycle time or so until it gets granted.

  For your question though, if the label cannot identify it as something
that has been notified, then you should re-notify.  Just be glad you only
have to wait 4 weeks and not 12.

  My 2 cents...




  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  Sam Wismer
  Lead Regulatory Engineer/
  Radio Approvals Engineer
  LXE, Inc.
  (770) 447-4224 Ext. 3654

  Visit Our Website at:
  http://www.lxe.com




  -----Original Message-----
  From: Kevin Harris [mailto:harr...@dscltd.com]
  Sent: Thursday, January 11, 2001 10:35 AM
  To: EMC-PSTC (E-mail)
  Subject: R&TTE Directive Notification Period




  Hello Sages,

  I am trying to assess what could possibly happen under the following
  scenario for the notification period. Lets say I had some SRD devices that
  have gone through the notification period without comment. At some later
  point I decide to introduce further devices in the line. The radios are
not
  identical schematically but all the RF characteristics are identical,
  including "percentage on" time. The new devices are all type tested, EMC
and
  safety tested in exactly the same manner as the devices previously
notified
  and will be used in the same application. My proposal at that point would
be
  to not wait for 4 weeks to expire on notification but to market the
devices
  immediately. My reasoning for this is that a country can only object to a
  device being marketed on "harm to the network" and then follow the
procedure
  in Article 9.5 for banning the device. Since they did not happen
previously,
  they cannot object now. I know that attitude might put some regulatory
noses
  out of joint but does anyone see a problem with the argument.



  Best Regards,



  Kevin Harris
  Manager, Approval Services
  Digital Security Controls
  3301 Langstaff Road
  Concord, Ontario
  CANADA
  L4K 4L2

  Tel: +1 905 760 3000 Ext. 2378
  Fax +1 905 760 3020

  Email: harr...@dscltd.com <mailto:harr...@dscltd.com>

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