Hi Everyone 

From a previous post, I see that in principle OSHA requires any electrical 
product being used in the workplace to be tested and certified by an NRTL, and 
that there's no lower voltage or power limit.  

The product in question is a PCIE card for fitting inside a computer of some 
sort. Its application is very much a professional one, so the host computers 
will be found in a US workplace. The PCIE card has no external interfaces, just 
the PCIE (12V and 3.3V) connection. 

Two questions:

1) Does the PCIE card need NRTL certification? 

2) Are similar cards actually NRTL certified in practice (I’m hoping those of 
you located stateside can chime in)?


Best Regards

Chris 

-
----------------------------------------------------------------
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:
https://www.mail-archive.com/emc-pstc@listserv.ieee.org/

Website:  https://ewh.ieee.org/soc/pses/
Instructions:  https://ewh.ieee.org/soc/pses/list.html (including how to 
unsubscribe)
List rules: https://ewh.ieee.org/soc/pses/listrules.html

For help, send mail to the list administrators:
Mike Sherman at: msherma...@comcast.net
Rick Linford at: linf...@ieee.org

For policy questions, send mail to:
Jim Bacher:  <j.bac...@ieee.org>
_________________________________________________
To unsubscribe from the EMC-PSTC list, click the following link: 
https://listserv.ieee.org/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=EMC-PSTC&A=1

Reply via email to