In article <59fde29df19f39b367d5e453a497d57841825...@watchguard.com>,
George Stults writes
>One does have to deal on occasion with questions from marketing and
>others&. I didn?t expect there would be any regulatory reason not
>to have power cords with different colors, other than poss
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Jim -
Other details aside, component manufacturers need to service
the industries that produce products that are not exempted
in Annex. I've heard rumor that some component
manufacturers are anticipating removal of the indicated
exemptions and are planning to eliminate Pb "tinned"
components from
One does have to deal on occasion with questions from marketing and others….
I didn’t expect there would be any regulatory reason not to have power cords
with different colors, other than possibly some obscure safety requirement for
particular colors that I wasn’t aware of, hence my question. From
Peter,
I placed a scanned PDF of the annex to an IRAM License issued in 2000 on the
IEEE Communities website. It has the details of the IRAM Safety Mark, at
least at that time.
https://www.ieeecommunities.org/emc-pstc
Of course it goes without saying that you need an IRAM Licence to use the
Hello all,
I know of one power cord manufacturer who has made hot pink and fluorescent
green colored power cord sets. The intended usage of these power cords was for
the audio industry when they rack mounted products and wanted to tell what
cables were power cords behind an instrument rack. Also,
Hi Jim
There is some useful general information on the "Reliability and Failure
Analisys" ("RFA") section of the ERA Technology Website @
http://www.era.co.uk/Services/RoHS.asp, and they
Paul Goodman lead the RoHS activities and the preparation of some of the
reports which the DTI is using as t
On Fri, 29 Oct 2004 07:37:01 -0400,
Jim Bacher wrote:
> We were reading a copy of the RoHS that we retrieved from:
...
>5. Lead in glass of cathode ray tubes, electronic components and
> fluorescent tubes.
...
> Most component companies are now working on getting the lead out, but the
> way
We were reading a copy of the RoHS that we retrieved from:
http://www.dti.gov.uk/sustainability/pdfs/finalrohs.pdf and found it to be
interesting. As a result we have questions, but first the key parts that
raise the questions:
In Article 4 / Prevention it says:
1. Member States shall ensure t
In article <8a2de2f1ddc8b7bb6bdd7bd5193e391841813...@watchguard.com>,
George Stults writes
>I have a question regarding the Colors that detachable equipment power
>cords (type used for ITE equipment, AC Mains 220/110VAC) are available
>in.
For Europe, I know of no restriction on the sheath colour
Ken,
Good point and well noted. I appologise if I muddied the waters. I probably
should have kept my mouth (keyboard?) shut because most of my background is
FCC/EU emissions and antenna design/modeling. I didn't take well enough into
account the specific MIL standard you quoted and your well s
One minor caveat to Mr. DeWitt. I was careful to talk about directivity and
not gain. Gain implies power flowing into the antenna on a transmission line
and power flowing out as a traveling wave. The ratio of power flowing out to
in is the antenna efficiency, and that multiplied by the directivi
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