Re: Multiple EMC requirements for Fire Equipment in EU
For the standards route to compliance only standards listed in the OJ with reference to the EMC directive can be used. EN50130-4 is listed, EN54-2 is not. With regards to the EMC directive, EN50130-4 wins. You will still need to do what your customers want you to do and that may include EN54-2, but there is no need to do it under the EMC directive. I'd advise that you attempt to get them to accept EN50130-4 in leu of the immunity tests you describe. Jon D. Curtis, PE Curtis-Straus LLC j...@curtis-straus.com Laboratory for EMC, Safety, NEBS, SEMI-S2 and Telecom 527 Great Roadvoice (978) 486-8880 Littleton, MA 01460 fax (978) 486-8828 http://www.curtis-straus.com
Multiple EMC requirements for Fire Equipment in EU
Hello All, I've been looking at the 1998 version of EN 54-2 which is the performance standard for Fire systems control and indicating Equipment. In that standard they have decided to call out some immunity testing. My first question is why! The family product EMC standard for these items already is covered by EN50130-4 (1996). Futhermore EN54-2 is a few years out of step by calling out tests from the 801 series. Can anyone out there from the working group for this standard offer some insight as to why this happened or if there are any plans to modify the standard to either call out EN50130-4 as the test method or to repeal the EMC provisions. What is the groups feeling? Can I safely ignore EN54-2 for it's EMC testing sections and just test to EN50130-4 (its more comprehensive) and declare compliance for the EMC directive on that basis . I really don't feel like taking the time and expense to extend my testing to old standards. Finally this brings up an intesting general point. Lets assume that both of these standards reach their dow. We know one conflicts technically with the other. Both documents have standard statements in their forewords about dates. The first one (dop) is the latest date by which the EN has to be implemented at a National level by publication of an identical NATIONAL STANDARD or by endorsement. the last one (dow) is the latest date by which the NATIONAL STANDARD conflicting with the EN have to be withdrawn. A country implementing an EN makes it a NATIONAL STANDARD as per the definition of the dop. Now we have two standards saying the other must go! Who wins the battle? Regards, Kevin Harris Compliance Engineering Manager Digital Security Controls 1645 Flint Road Downsview, Ontario CANADA M3J 2J6 Tel 416 665 8460 Ext. 378 Fax 416 665 7753