Derek,
This points out one of the weaknesses of the self-declaration (DOC). The
responsible party can self declare for whatever standards they feel suite
their needs. For instance, just because a product is CE marked, it doesn't
mean that it has been tested or passed to all the relevant standards. It may
just be safety. The only way to tell for sure is to look at the actual DOC,
which lists the standards the product has been tested to. In the case you
brought up, The product should have been tested for emissions to EN 55014 at
the very least. We would also recommend EN 55022, since the potential for
interference goes well beyond  the 300MHz called out in EN 55014.
 
William M Stumpf 
DLS Electronics 
166 South Carter St. 
Genoa City WI 53128 
ph: 262-279-0210 
fx: 262-279-3630 
email: bstu...@dlsemc.com 

 ----Original Message-----
From: lfresea...@aol.com [mailto:lfresea...@aol.com]
Sent: Thursday, October 02, 2003 1:02 PM
To: emc-p...@ieee.org
Subject: Missing Emissions data from D of C?



Hi all, 
 
while reviewing a clients competitors D of C, I was surprised to see that only
Immunity and Low voltage were address, there were no emissions requirements
called out.
 
The product is a professional arcade game. Is this product exempt? Any
thoughts why this could be allowed?
 
Cheers,
 
Derek N. Walton
Owner, L F Research EMI Design and Test Facility
Poplar Grove,
IL 61065


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