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RE: Re: CE certification
- To: <ukha_d@xxxxxxx>
- Subject: RE: Re: CE certification
- From: "Nikola Kasic" <nikola@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 30 May 2002 11:37:38 +0100
- Mailing-list: list ukha_d@xxxxxxx; contact
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- Reply-to: ukha_d@xxxxxxx
Thanks
Tony.
One
more interesting question:
If I
sell everything as a kit consisting of CE compliant components what's the
situation then.
E.g. I
found all the components to build TiVo or similar and I prepare software,
self
unpacking ISO image. Then I don't want to bother assembling and installing
the
things, but I sell it as a kit. All the components are CE
compliant.
Will I
be responsible, if when assembled resulting product is not, or do I have to
certify resulting product?
Cheers,
Nik
Sorry, I started typing this
before
lunch, then came back and saw several replies. I hope what I've
written helps and doesn't overlap anything others have said:
In
order to bring to market a product in the EU the manufacturer or,
where the
manufacturer is not in the EU, the manufacturers representative
or, where
the manufacturer does not have a representative in the EU, the importer
needs to show that the product meets all appropriate standards. This is
done by holding a "Certificate Of Conformity" stating which
European Directives the product complies with.
For our type of
stuff, that means the Low Voltage Directive (LVD) and
the ElectroMagnetic
Compatibility (EMC) Directive.
The LVD is basically there to ensure
that users of your product are not exposed to any hazards during normal
use
and single-fault conditions. It covers products operating at
voltages
greater than 50V (there is an upper limit, but I can't remember it off
the
top of my head). You make your life easier if your product is
powered
>from
inside your product are less than 50V. If not, you need to
ascertain
which British Standard / European Norm your product is categorised
under,
and claim conformance to that standard.
EMC is somewhat
worse(!)
Unless your product has no electromechanical components, or you can
prove
it has a negligible EMC signature (such as a wrist watch), you need to
show
that your product complies with the relevant EMC standards. This
is
where it gets messy -
You can either go the "Standards Route" to
compliance : there are 100's of standards, and probably only one or two
that your product falls into. Try the EMC Compliance Journal web
site
http://www.compliance-club.com/index.php for
a start. Be prepared for a lot of reading. Alternatively, look
for
a friendly EMC testhouse (we use ETS in Dunmow, Essex - 01371 856061) -
at
a minimum I would imagine two days testing is required - at circa ?700
per day!
Or the "Technical Construction File (TCF) Route" to
compliance : this is where you prepare all technical, design, and
in-house
test documentation, send the lot off to a "Notified Body", pay them
??k's
up, and await their comments. If you have designed it using sound
engineering practices, with regard to EMC from the start, then they
might
just issue you with a certificate of compliance. This route is now
mainly used where the designed product doesn't easily fit into one of
the
categories for the "Standards Route".
As for Dave's comment about
small-time PC assemblers - IIRC, a year or so ago Trading Standards took
a
small-time PC manufacturer to court and won. They had been assembling
PC's
using CE marked components however, the final PC's did not meet the EMC
standards (even though each component part therein was CE marked). CE +
CE
does not naturally equal CE.
But as for Nik's original question -
yes,
there is a legal requirement for you to have a certificate.
However,
you don't _have_ to do any testing at all - it's all a matter of showing
due diligence. I can't remember the origin of it but the phrase
"You
have to be 80% certain that 80% of your product would pass (the EMC
tests)"
sticks in my mind from many years ago. You may decide that because your
products are small, low powered, and sold in very low quantities
(Trading
Standards would not expect you to spend ?2000 getting a product EMC
tested
if it sells for ?30 and you're likely to only sell six products in its
lifetime), then the simple act of operating an AM radio close to the
circuit and confirming that radio reception is not interfered with may
be
sufficient.
In reality, you're not likely to get any problems unless
a
user of your equipment finds it malfunctions when, say, the microwave is
on. Or their television reception is interfered with by the use of
your product. That coupled with the fact that Trading Standards
don't
have the manpower or finance to effectively police the
directive.
(Apologies if my definitions are not 100% correct as I'm
running from memory. Standard disclaimers
apply.)
HTH Tony
-----Original Message----- From:
Downes,
David [mailto:David.Downes@xxxxxxx] Sent: 29 May 2002 12:11 To:
'ukha_d@xxxxxxx' Subject: RE: [ukha_d] Re: CE
certification
If I remember correctly all electrical equipment
which is sold has to guarantee meeting the standards for electromagnetic
compatibility. This guarantee is either by testing or via
documentation and someone taking legal responsibility. This is not
an
area I'm familiar with, and wonder what the situation is with regards to
small time PC assemblers. Are all the components supposed to be CE
certified and therefore the product as a
whole is?
Dave
-----Original Message----- From:
paul_watkin [mailto:paul_watkin@xxxxxxx] Sent: 29 May 2002
11:59 To: ukha_d@xxxxxxxSubject: [ukha_d] Re: CE
certification
From memory if you use an external power supply
that
is CE approved you still need to have your product tested but as you
don't
have mains going into it the testing is less complex and therefore
cheaper.
Regards
Paul
--- In ukha_d@y..., "Nikola
Kasic"
<nikola@k...> wrote: > Does anyone knows: > If I want to
design and start selling some electrical device, when do I need >
to
get CE certification. > I think that proces for obtaining such
certification is expensive so, for > the cheap things and small
series, probably it's not worth taking such > route. >
However, I would like to know, is there any legal requirement to have
such > certificate if you want to sell such devices. > I think
that someone mentioned that if your device has separate power
supply > then it doesn't need it. > Anyone to put some light on
this issue? > Nik
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