At Chassis Plans, our primary concern is to provide
our customers with the best and most reliable industrial
computer systems, rackmount LCDs, single board computers,
system host boards, option cards and backplanes. We
will continue to do this while meeting all international
and domestic environmental regulatory standards.
Specifically, in the first quarter of 2006 Chassis
Plans will begin shipping versions of our products
that meet the Directive 2002/95/EC of the European
Parliament and the Council of 27 January 2003 on the
restriction of the use of certain hazardous substances
in electrical and electronic equipment, commonly
referred to as RoHS (Restriction of Hazardous Substances)
and it's companion, Directive 2002/96/EC of
the European Parliament and the Council of 27 January
2003 on waste electrical and electronic equipment,
commonly referred to as WEEE.
Since 2004 Chassis Plans has been actively engaged
in developing the engineering and manufacturing procedures
and processes that address RoHS and WEEE product compliance.
1. |
Begin shipping RoHS and WEEE certified products in the first quarter of 2006. |
2. |
RoHS certified Chassis Plans products are manufactured using the industry standard SAC (Tin-Silver-Copper) alloy currently offered by the major solder paste manufacturers. |
3. |
Chassis Plans will no longer offer, except to military customers, sheet metal products finished in "gold zinc". |
4. |
Chassis Plans will continue to offer both non-RoHS and RoHS certified products. |
5. |
Chassis Plans identifies RoHS certified products by using a specific RoHS part number. |
6. |
Chassis Plans' RoHS and WEEE compliant products are marked with appropriate compliance identification labels. |
The
RoHS Directive applies to end-user electrical and electronic
equipment (EEEE) and sets maximum acceptable levels
of 6 substances within the composition of the product
lead, cadmium, mercury, hexavalent chromium and
both polybrominated biphenyl (PBB) and polybrominated
diphenyl ether (PBDE) flame retardants. It says that
Member States shall ensure that, from July 1, 2006,
new electrical and electronic equipment put on the market
does not contain excessive levels of these compounds.
The
WEEE Directive, effective August 13, 2005, is essentially
environmental legislation intended to reduce the amount
of waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE)
being dumped in landfill sites. It aims to make the
producer responsible for WEEE and encourage the recycling
and re-use of EEE at the end of its useful life. The
WEEE Directive defines 10 categories of end-user equipment
which are covered by the Directive and provides guidelines
for recycling targets.
The Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) in the
UK has played a major part in the development and
implementation of both the RoHS and WEEE Directives.
The DTI web site includes a non-statutory guidance
document for these Directives. The following decision
trees are taken from th
e guidance notes and are helpful in assessing whether
your product is covered by the RoHS and WEEE Directives.
Exemptions
The two major types of equipment which fall outside
the scope of both the WEEE and RoHS Directives are:
Fixed Installation - this is defined by the European
Commission as, a combination of several items of equipment,
systems, finished products and/or components assembled
and/or erected by an assembler/installer at a given
place to operate together in an expected environment
to perform a specific task, but not intended to be
placed onto the market as a single functional or commercial
unit.
Large-scale Stationary Industrial tool/machine
this is a specific exclusion within product category
6 - electrical and electronic tools. It is defined
by the European Commission as, a machine or system,
consisting of a combination of equipment, systems
or products, each of which is designed to be used
in industry only, permanently fixed and installed
by professionals at a given place in an industrial
machine or in an industrial building to perform a
specific task.
[The WEEE Directive excludes these items because it
is not practical to identify a single responsible
party for disposal and recycling. The RoHS Directive
excludes them on the grounds of consistency with the
WEEE Directive.]
In addition to these, equipment described as monitoring
and control instruments (such as industrial control
panels and remote monitoring systems) and medical
devices (including analyzers, radiotherapy equipment
& laboratory equipment) are categories defined
in the WEEE Directive which are specifically excluded
from the RoHS Directive.
Finally, equipment used for servers, storage/storage
array and telecommunications infrastructure (switching,
routers and gateways) is covered by the RoHS Directive
but, may use lead in solder (the limits for the other
5 substances must comply). This exemption has been
introduced to allow lead in solders for professional,
high reliability applications for which viable lead-free
alternatives have not been identified. This category
is informally referred to RoHS-5.
In brief, other items outside the scope of the RoHS
Directive include:
Resources
These Directives are complex and these guidance notes
are issued for general information only. Professional
advice should always be sought to take account of
individual circumstances. Chassis Plans cannot accept
responsibility for actions taken on the basis of these
notes alone.
Additional information is available from a wide variety
of sources.
WEEE Directive
2002-96-EC (pdf, 288KB)
RoHS Directive
2002-95-EC (pdf, 115KB)
First
Amendment (pdf, 40KB)
Second
Amendment (pdf, 36KB)
IPC - Serving the Printed
Circuit Board and electronics Assembly Industries
RoHS
Guidance November05 Final.pdf - UK Department
of Trade and Industry (DTI)
Main UK RoHS Site
RoHS
and WEEE Frequently Asked Questions - European
Commission
Action
to Take on WEEE and RoHS - Electronicsweekly.com
Step-By-Step
Guide to Compliance w/ RoHS Directive - Farnell
in One
RoSHwell.com - News, Tips, Tools for RoHS-WEEE Compliance