Piling on, while one may compute very high field intensities from say a mobile 
phone or other such microwave handheld transmitter, these field intensities 
will not illuminate a 1.5 m square area at such levels.  If such levels are in 
fact justified, it might make sense to reduce the required uniform field area, 
thereby allowing the use of higher gain antennas, and lower power amplifier 
requirements at the higher frequencies where such power becomes (even more) 
expensive.

 

-- 

Ken Javor

(256) 650-5261

 

From: John Woodgate <j...@woodjohn.uk>
Reply-To: John Woodgate <j...@woodjohn.uk>
Date: Monday, July 24, 2023 at 5:03 PM
To: <EMC-PSTC@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG>
Subject: Re: [PSES] Woodgate's reply on residential Immunity field strength

 

There are, but 20 V/m still is a very high value. One wouldn't expect a 
transmitter to be used in a car while it is on charge.

On 2023-07-24 22:57, Jim Bacher, WB8VSU wrote:

Wi-Fi and cell phones are not the only transmitters near cars. There are 
police, fire and ham radio transceivers in cars. Some of which are on gain 
antennas and can be remotely accessed to transmit. Not to mention hand held 
transceivers that might walk by. 

 

Jim, WB8VSU 

 

 

On July 24, 2023 5:51:27 PM Brian Gregory <brian_greg...@netzero.net> wrote:

 

The reference for 20 V/m to EV chargers comes from UL 2231-2.  This is not a 
medical standard, but Annex A does call out the medical standard 60601-1-2 as a 
reference, as well as CENELEC 50204.  We can't figure out why;  cell phones 
produce less than half that, and our WiFi transmitter is probably 
representative, and is rated well under 1 W.  I could see a higher immunity 
standard as needed for commercial environments, say in a bank of 4-5 chargers.

 

Following along in 61000-4-3, we agree with John that residential applications 
are clearly best matched to the definition for Class 2 environment, and the 
table in Clause 5 says the limits for Class 2 equipment is 3 V/m.  20 V/m does 
not show up in Clause 5 of 61000-4-3 for any class.  

 

So, I've should to reach out to a UL standards group and find out if this is 
really necessary for residential applications.   Our local lab can't do more 
than 10, and an overseas affiliated lab is similarly limited.  I'd like to know 
were this requirement comes from.   This is more a question for EV Charging 
safety than a mainstream EMC question. 

 

As a backup, I could request a comment to Ken's point is if they define the 
peak of the modulation as 20 V/m.  I don't know where these are defined.

 

Thanks for all the detailed replies!

 

Colorado Brian 
720-450-4933



---------- Original Message ----------
From: John Woodgate <j...@woodjohn.uk>
To: Brian Gregory <brian_greg...@netzero.net>
Subject: Re: [PSES] Immunity test field strength, residential setting
Date: Fri, 21 Jul 2023 18:05:59 +0100

61000-4-3 is a Basic Standard. It does not specify test levels but indicates 
possible test levels. You need to look in detail at Clause 5, but look at these 
words:

 Product committees shall select the appropriate test level for each frequency 
range needing to be tested as well as the frequency ranges.

The residential environment is usually designated Class 2 (see Annex E of the 
standard), which calls for 3 V/m.

======================================================================================
Best wishes John Woodgate OOO-Own Opinions Only
www.woodjohn.uk
Rayleigh, Essex UK

I hear, and I forget. I see, and I remember. I do, and I understand. Xunzi (340 
- 245 BC)

On 2023-07-21 17:44, Brian Gregory wrote:

 Hello colleagues, 

 

We are building EV Chargers for residential markets (not just US) and one of 
the safety applicable standards is UL 2231-2.  It calls out  IEC 61000-4-3 for 
immunity testing parameters, which states a requirement for a field strength of 
20V/m.  Our EMC expert says typically testing is "done at 3 Vrms, which is 
standard for most products in residential environments."   He can only test up 
to 10V, and we're hearing the same from an overseas lab to whom our 
manufacturer refers.  

 

Does FCC Part B have guidelines for field strength we can cite?   Can some 
offer this "DC guy" (aka, 60 Hz) a quick definition of what the 20V/m 
represents?

 

I'm guessing 20 V/m is for higher density commercial applications, aka charging 
stations, so we probably need an exception for residential.  

 

Thank you!

 

Colorado Brian 
720-450-4933

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