Ken,
I don't think anyone could disagree with your sentiments. The problem is
attributing the level of liability between user and manufacturer.
 
Car manufacturers sleep at night yet their products kill thousands each
year, they design them to high standards yet by their use they still kill
and maim. Do we hold them liable, no, in 99.9% of cases we don't.
 
You slip down the stairs and break your leg, do you sue:

*       the caveman who invented the staircase?
*       your shoe manufacturer for using a shoe sole incompatible with the
stair carpet?
*       the stair carpet manufacturer for using material incompatible with
the shoe sole material?
*       the distiller for not putting a warning on the bottle of whisky you
just drank

It's "reasonable responsibility/diligence" that needs defining, not
"spurious emissions"!! In addition the legal fraternity should have some
standards imposed upon them to put an end to pure gold digging through
litigation that seems to just escalate and to which we thus have to pander.
If every foreseeable mis-use of every commodity sold was accounted for then
no-one would sell anything.
 
Chris
______________________________________________ 
Chris James                             
Engineering Services Manager 
Dolby Laboratories, Inc. (UK) 


 -----Original Message-----
From: acar...@uk.xyratex.com [mailto:acar...@uk.xyratex.com]
Sent: 03 January 2002 12:54
To: emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
Subject: Re: EMC-related safety issues



I get the idea that we a missing the whole point of this discussion. 

Should we as Professional Safety Engineers and Product designers consider
the safety implications of EMC emissions ? 


The answer is a definite Yes. We have a clear duty of care and
responsibility to consider all implications of our products being used in
there intended application. Even if the consideration on EMC emissions and
safety is "Do not be silly." We still have to at least consider it. 


It has been stated that CISPR22 and CFR Title 47 Part 15b is only concerned
with interfering with radio transmissions. This is true and why the
enforcement falls under the Federal Communications Commission. But not all
products fall under this remit and could quite happily be emitting large EM
fields and comply with all current US legislation. 


Take for example the line surge equipment you use to test immunity to
EN61000-4-5, exempt from the Part 15B under section 15.29 as "A digital
device used exclusively as industrial, commercial, or medical test
equipment." And clearly not medical equipment. Yet when operated can produce
a magnetic field that will interfere with the operation of old style
pacemakers. Should you consider this when addressing the safe design of the
product, or blindly state you meet all applicable EMC regulations for this
product. With my unit the manufacturers have considered this and clearly
state in the user manual that people with pacemakers should not operate or
be be near the equipment when it is use. Two lines in the manual is not very
big much against the risk the of killing someone. 


In Europe for CE we have no choice. The LVD state quite clearly that testing
to a standard alone is insufficient to demonstrate compliance. You to
consider foreseeable use and misuse, and you have to perform a risk
assessment on your equipment. 


Taking it down to the standard level IEC60950 3rd Edition, section 0.2.7
states you must consider the effect of rf radiation on service and user
personnel. 


Another example, you build a IPC cabinet for to be built into a production
line, again exempt from CISPR 22, yet when it it running, causes
interference on the control circuitry of a nearby Robotic arm. In the US
immunity testing is not required, so who is liable. A susceptible Arm or
noisy IPC cabinet. Being that every was fine until the cabinet was
installed, you can see the blame would be pointed. 


Simply put, if EMC emissions from one of your products caused someone's
death, because you did not consider it important. Could you sleep at night ?



Ken Javor wrote: 


In my experience it is EXTREMELY unlikely that personal electronics could
have disturbed ADF heading indication.  The ADF sensor is an
electrostatically shielded loop which is mounted typically on the belly of a
transport class aircraft, well away from any passenger-conveyed intense
sources of magnetic fields.  The loop is very insensitive and requires quite
a bit of magnetic field to respond and is completely insensitive to electric
fields altogether.  Further, no one would use ADF to line up an approach on
a runway. 

---------- 
From: Cortland Richmond <cortland.richm...@alcatel.com> 
To: Mike Hopkins <mhopk...@thermokeytek.com> 
Cc: cherryclo...@aol.com, emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org 
Subject: Re: EMC-related safety issues 
List-Post: emc-pstc@listserv.ieee.org
Date: Wed, Jan 2, 2002, 5:26 PM 
  
  


If they meant "radio compass,"  that is a different can of monkeys. The
radio compass was traditionally the indicator for the ADF set , pointing to
the ground station, and was usually mounted so as to revolve in front of a
scale which rotated with the aircraft's' magnetic heading. A noisy switching
power supply could well interfere with a low-frequency receiver. But (in MY
opinion) the Guide does not say enough about what actually happened. 
  

Cortland 
(My thoughts, not Alcatel's!) 
  
  


Mike Hopkins wrote: 


 As already stated, the incident of the DC-10 has for years been used as an
example of personal electronics (laptops) interfering with avionics. The
only version I've ever heard (and the only one that makes sense) had to do
with interference to an ILS receiver operating somewhere between 108MHz and
118MHz. I for one, don't believe in laptop computers interfering with a
compass -- UNLESS -- the people reporting the story (and writing the guide?)
used a "compass" as a way to relate to the general population that a laptop
caused interference with an instrument that kept the airplane headed in the
right direction -- probably assuming that most people would not be able to
relate to an ILS or NAV receiver, but everyone knows what a compass is.....
I remember the magazine article, which also reported on an electronically
controlled wheelchair going out of control when an EMT keyed a mobile
two-way radio in a nearby ambulance. (I might add, I've since heard several
variations on that story as well -- wheelchair went over a cliff, wheelchair
went around in circles, wheelchair dumped patient and took of by itself;
radio was a walkie-talkie, radio was CB, etc.... You get the idea.) There
was also a video being circulated of a Connie Chung news broadcast relating
similar horror stories of the effects of EMC. We used to have a copy here,
but I haven't seen it in years -- probably dumped when we moved.....My 2
cents worth......Mike HopkinsThermo KeyTek

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Andrew Carson - Product Safety Engineer, Xyratex, UK 
Phone: +44 (0)23 9249 6855 Fax: +44 (0)23 9249 6014 
  

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