Sorry to jump in on this so late but I've been on vacation.

What is the reason for the table size called out in ANSI and why 1.5m x 1m? Is
there some science behind it? Is it explained anywhere? Just curious. Below
1Ghz isn't the table suppose to be invisible to RF anyway?

We test to CISPR11 which only calls out the height of the table (0.8m). The
other dimensions are not listed and I never questioned it because I always
assumed they were not important.

I see someone posted that only the height was important and the other
dimensions are "Nominal", but out 'big' test table is 0.8m deep by 3m long.
Can hardly be considered nominal.

Why I'm so curious is we are looking to purchase or build some new test tables
and I want to get the dimensions correct. They must be able to handle
instruments of 600 lbs, have wheels, and can fit through a standard 48"
doorway (3' 9" available). A 1m deep table is a tight fit with cables, hoses,
etc..

Are there any companies who sell test tables or do you still have to make them?

The Other Brian


-----Original Message-----
From: emc-p...@ieee.org [mailto:emc-p...@ieee.org] On Behalf Of WNya
Sent: Monday, October 10, 2011 7:54 PM
To: EMC-PSTC
Subject: Table Size in Emissions test

Dear Experts,
Recently my company went through the first ISO17025 audit. We have a table
smaller than the standard requirement of 1.5m x 1m since our products are
small, typically 10cm x 10cm x 10cm. The height of our table was 0.8m. The
auditor wanted us to change the table size to follow the standard.
What does it matter since we never use the extra space on the table? I do
agree we must keep to the height requirement since the floor is a ground plane
and thus it sets a fixed capacitance to the EUT and also controls the lengths
of any attached cables.

Can we reject or challenge the auditor's request? Has anyone experience the
same situation?

Sent from Wendy.Nya iPhone

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