Now it is a little more work than that. Last one I was involved in we did a
quick and dirty temperature test, dielectric, ground bond and visual inspection
to ensure proper fusing, the power switch breaks line, PE is green
yellow/green, etc. The inspection takes about 2 hrs then the report is
Thank you for responses I've received. They've been very helpful.
Jim Hulbert
From: emc-p...@ieee.org [mailto:emc-p...@ieee.org] On Behalf Of Jim Hulbert
Sent: Thursday, November 01, 2012 4:35 PM
To: EMC-PSTC@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG
Subject: Are Product Safety Certifications Mandatory in Canada?
In
Bob,I believe that document may be on the Product Compliance online communities site. Unfortunately most of the IEEE web servers are down because of the storm so I cannot verify.The URL is http://product-compliance.oc.ieee.org/ and you need an IEEE account to view it. An IEEE account is available
The amount of time required and the specific tests that would be involved in
the special inspection, which would typically be for a single product or
system (or a small very small number) would depend greatly on the type of
product it is, and is similar to an electrical inspection - the intent is
Jim,
In addition to the electrical code requirements under the Canadian Electrical
Code (CEC), CSA C22.1, and the applicable parts of the CE Part 2 standards (CSA
C22.2 #X), the Field Evaluation (sometimes called Special Inspection) can be
done by an SCC Accredited Inspection body under CSA
Esteemed Colleagues,
I have a product submitted to NRTL E that uses a Mylar electrical barrier
between line-voltage (120 V ac), uninsulated live parts on a circuit board and
the aluminum electrical enclosure. The 'through-air' spacing would be a little
short without this barrier in place. The
The NRTL assessment engineer must provide specific requirements via
normative clauses of the scoped standard, or a formal corporate policy that
has been published. If this person will not or cannot, immediately contact
the agency's technical authority for the scope of your equipment. The OSHA
NRTL
In message
99280a01673ff44180f15babb58896ca091b2ae...@troyex2.itwfeg.biz, dated
Fri, 2 Nov 2012, Richard Pittenger richard.pitten...@hobartcorp.com
writes:
NRTL ?E? is objecting to use of this material for this application but
so far has not provided a reason. Can any of you think of a
Flame rating doesn't mean it's an insulator. Is it an insulator? What are the
Dielectric properties? Insulators depend on the Standard. Most I've worked in
require insulators to be 0.7mm thick, minimum. They also may be concerned that
a sharp solder point or component pins can pierce the
And some standards will provide only a reduction in clearance if an
insulator is used, it won't necessarily replace the need for a clearance.
(as silly as that may sound)
___
Ralph McDiarmid | Schneider Electric
Can someone identify the organization that issues this logo?
http://tjstechnical.com/images/IMG_0238-1.jpg
Tom Smith, P.Eng
Product Safety and Approvals Consultant
TJS Technical Services Inc.
Tel: +1 403-612-6664
Email: tsm...@tjstechnical.com
http://tjstechnical.com
Hi Tom,
That symbol is a China RoHS marking found in document SJ/T11364-2006 issued by
the MII where the specifications for that symbol are given. This symbol's
intent is to indicate a product to be environmentally friendly.
IHTH.
Best regards,
Ron
From: Tom Smith
Tom,
The logo is the China RoHS Environment Friendly Use Period logo - it should
be green if the substances are all under the limits or not present, and It
would be orange if any of them were above or if you did not know, with a
number inside where the e is. That number would be a manufacturer
Hi Richard:
Unfortunately, this situation mixes two, independent
requirements: 1) electrical insulation requirements,
and 2) anti-fire requirements.
If the clearance (air insulation) is insufficient for
basic insulation, then a solid insulation may be used
in place of the clearance.
If
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