Re: EN61010-1, Symbol 14

2003-04-17 Thread ggars...@us.tuv.com
:--) Plus, isn't Chinese the most-spoken language in the world? [I am sure I will be corrected if wrong!] ;--) So having everyone else change to Chinese would inconvenience the least number of people? best regards, glyn This message is from the IEEE EMC Society Product Safety

Re: EN61010-1, Symbol 14

2003-04-17 Thread John Woodgate
I read in !emc-pstc that Pete Perkins peperkin...@cs.com wrote (in 01c304f8$70d7d7a0$78d5c6ac@oemcomputer) about 'EN61010-1, Symbol 14' on Thu, 17 Apr 2003: As an alternative, perhaps this group would work on the use of a universal, worldwide language (English, for instance) which would take

Re: EN61010-1, Symbol 14

2003-04-17 Thread Rich Nute
Hi Richard: As you say, this web site provides a discussion on the exclamation symbol. However, the discussion is slanted in one direction that not everyone in the safety fraternity would necessarily subscribe to. For instance, I have seen the 'high voltage flash' sign used as a

RE: EN61010-1, Symbol 14

2003-04-17 Thread Pete Perkins
Richard, et al; The use of 'universal' markings continues to be controversial. In order for markings to be universally accepted there needs to be considerable training as to the correct interpretation as to what the symbol means. This has been confirmed by several studies. Adding any

re: EN61010-1, Symbol 14

2003-04-17 Thread richhug...@aol.com
...@fastwave.com Cc: emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org Subject: Re: EN61010-1, Symbol 14 For a history and discussion of this symbol, see: http://www.triodyne.com/SAFETY~1/sb_v17n2.pdf Best regards, Rich This message is from the IEEE EMC Society Product Safety Technical Committee emc-pstc

Re: EN61010-1, Symbol 14

2003-04-14 Thread Rich Nute
For a history and discussion of this symbol, see: http://www.triodyne.com/SAFETY~1/sb_v17n2.pdf Best regards, Rich This message is from the IEEE EMC Society Product Safety Technical Committee emc-pstc discussion list. Visit our web site at: