Scott, 

EMC compliance is the sole responsibility of the manufacturer (or whoever 
places the product on the market). It’s entirely up to you how you control 
ongoing compliance (or not).

T
----- Original Message -----
From: Scott Xe
Sent: 03/13/13 03:48 PM
To: EMC-PSTC@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG
Subject: [PSES] Critical component in EMC report

It is common not to have critical component list in EMC reports issued from 3rd 
party laboratories. Those information are essential to track if the correct 
parts to be used in mass production. What is main reason not to have it as a 
common practice in the field?

Thanks and regards,

Scott

-
----------------------------------------------------------------
This message is from the IEEE Product Safety Engineering Society emc-pstc 
discussion list. To post a message to the list, send your e-mail to 
<emc-p...@ieee.org>

All emc-pstc postings are archived and searchable on the web at:
http://www.ieee-pses.org/emc-pstc.html

Attachments are not permitted but the IEEE PSES Online Communities site at 
http://product-compliance.oc.ieee.org/ can be used for graphics (in well-used 
formats), large files, etc.

Website:  http://www.ieee-pses.org/
Instructions:  http://listserv.ieee.org/request/user-guide.html
List rules: http://www.ieee-pses.org/listrules.html

For help, send mail to the list administrators:
Scott Douglas <emcp...@radiusnorth.net>
Mike Cantwell <mcantw...@ieee.org>

For policy questions, send mail to:
Jim Bacher:  <j.bac...@ieee.org>
David Heald: <dhe...@gmail.com>

Reply via email to