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Successful marketing
of a product often demands conforming to strict national
and international standards. Chassis Plans can make
adhering to these standards as simple and streamlined
as possible. Leading you from start to finish through
the maze of regulatory requirement, we can identify
your needs and guide you through the entire certification
process.
To do this, we are accredited by numerous national and
international technical bodies such as American Association
for Laboratory Accreditation (A2LA), the National voluntary
Accreditation Program (NVLAP) and the European Union
(EU).
Chassis Plans partners perform testing
of hardware and software products for the computer industry.
We provide various types of testing, including compatibility,
functionality, interoperability, performance, usability,
localization, compliance, and certification testing.
For more information, select a test category at the
bottom of this page.
Ready to release your product? Have you spent enough
time doing QA on your product? Because if you send out
your product with too many bugs or anomalies, you might
be have more problems than you realize. Research studies
over the past twenty years have proven that it pays
to do thing right the first time. Many companies only
look at the short term - the "here-and-now"
approach. They forget that anomalies don't just mean
having to spend some time after release fixing a bug
or two. It also means additional costs for technical
support for their customers, costs to distribute the
fixes to the customers, all the negative press generated
by the anomalies, and additional regression testing
to verify that nothing else was broken by the fixes.
Let us help you make sure your product is ready before
you ship it.
These accreditations allow our local partners to confer
a wide range of certifications including ISO 9000, NEBS,
CE and UL.

CE Marking is currently required for many products sold
in Europe, yet many exporters are still unsure or unaware
of what affect this has on their business. Bring your
product up to CE standards with little effort.
The European Commission refers to the CE Marking of
products as a "passport" which can allow a
manufacturer to freely circulate their products within
the European marketplace. The marking applies only to
products regulated by European health, safety and environmental
protection legislation (product directives) but this
is estimated to include more than 50% of the goods currently
exported from the U.S. to Europe.
The actual CE Marking is the letters "CE"
which a manufacturer affixes to certain products for
access to the European market (consisting of 18 countries
and also referred to as the European Economic Area or
EEA). The letters "CE' are an abbreviation of a
French phrase "Conformite Europeene". The
marking indicates that the manufacturer has conformed
with all the obligations required by the legislation.
Initially, the phrase was "CE Mark": however,
"CE Marking" was legislated as its replacement
in 1993.
If the product directives apply to your products and
you want to export to the European market, then CE Marking
will be crucial to your success. There will be only
one set of laws and regulations to comply with in designing
and manufacturing your product for the entire marketplace.
The multiple and conflicting national restrictions on
regulated products will be eliminated. Additional benefits
may include your product being made safer for consumers
as well as reduced damage claims and liability premiums.
The not so good news - The product directives may exceed
the current national laws and regulations. These increased
or new requirements may require a manufacturer to change
their design or production processes to continue or
enter into this market. The new directives and their
implementation is confusing, undergoing constant change
and subject to interpretation. This is why it is imperative
that Chassis Plans becomes the single solution provider
for your compliance needs.

Chassis Plans offers complete CSA compliance. When selling
your products into Canada, rely on Chassis Plans to
provide the tools and services necessary to become a
active member of the CSA International. We work in Canada
and around the world, to offer a full range of knowledge
and experience required to comply with the CSA standard.
The CSA International addresses real needs, such as
enhancing public safety and health. Advancing the quality
of life. Helping to preserve the environment. Facilitating
trade....and more. Each year, hundreds of organizations
benefit from becoming certified CSA partners. Contact
Chassis Plans to begin promoting your product in the
Canadian marketplace.
All GR-63, GR-487 and ETSI physical requirements
can now be performed and expanded capabilities now include
full testing for both the seismic and fire resistance
requirements. NTS is further partnered to allow
their test data and reports to be accepted by RBOCs
and CLECs that require NRTL status.
NEBS testing is required for anyone supplying
equipment to the Regional Bell Operating Companies (RBOCs)
and the Competitive Local Exchange Carriers (CLECs).
Any NTS partners are NVLAP approved and FCC listed.
Through Chassis Plans and it's partners, we also have
the capability to test equipment to the appropriate
TBR/CTR standards for Europe.
System (NEBS) Requirements:
Physical Protection
EMC & Electrical Safety
GR-1089-CORE for EMC, Surge Standards and Electrical
Safety
- Pre-compliance
- ESD Testing
- FCC-Part 15, 18 & 68 Telecom
- EMC Emissions & Immunity (10kHz
to 10 GHz)
- Electrical Safety/Grounding and Compliance
- Lightning and AC Power Fault Exposure
(2nd Level)
- Consulting for Telecom, EMC and Product
Safety
- CE Mark/FCC
- Bonding and Grounding
- First and Second Level Lightning Surge
Testing
Physical
Testing
GR-63-CORE
Physical Protection Standards
- Complete Physical Testing
- Temperature, Humidity and Altitude
- High & Low Temperature Exposure
and Thermal Shock
- Fire Resistance (Spread) and Heat
Dissipation
- Smoke Corrosivity
- Earthquake Vibration/Resistance
- Office Vibration
- Airborne Contaminants
- Transportation Vibration
- Acoustic Noise
- Illumination
- Thermal Operating Conditions
- Handling Drop Tests
ENEC is a CENELEC certification scheme for a common
European mark of conformity for certain products (luminaires,
components and office & data equipment) which comply
with European Standards. The ENEC mark is a common European
safety certification mark, based on testing to harmonised
European safety standards for European manufacturers.
However at the March '98 CCA meeting in Slovenia it
was agreed that the 'ENEC' mark, the use of which had
previously been restricted to European manufacturers
only, would now be opened to manufacturers worldwide.
Initially this relaxation of the rules will only apply
to IT equipment (EN 60950), but it is anticipated that
other product sectors falling within the ENEC scope
will inevitably follow suit. Currently the 'ENEC' mark
scope includes:
Information
- Technology Equipment (EN 60950)
- Transformers (EN 60742, EN 61558)
- Luminaires (EN 60598) and associated
components (eg EN 60920, EN 60400)
- Appliance switches (EN 61058)
It stands for 'European Norms Electrical
Certification' - the number shown to the right of the
mark merely identifying the CCA member, (17 in the case
of Nemko). Nemko's mark may be added, if the manufacturer
so wishes. ENEC indicates to both consumers, authorities
and others concerned that the product is certified by
a highly recognized third-party. In short, this entails;
- Testing and certification by an ENEC
member certification body, such as NTS
- The manufacturer's production control
must satisfy ISO 9002, or equivalent
- Initial and minimum annual production
surveillance audits by the certification body, based
on harmonized inspection procedures
- Selected re-testing of certified products
every second year
The mark has had remarkable success.
About 5000 ENEC licenses have been issued to date, representing
15,000 different products on the European market.

The
UL Mark on a product means that UL has tested and evaluated
representative samples of that product and determined
that they meet UL's requirements. In addition, products
are periodically checked by UL at the manufacturing
facility to make sure they continue to meet UL requirements.
A full range of UL testing services is offered to comply
with all UL requirements. Whether your bringing your
product into Canada, the US, or other select countries,
Chassis Plans can assist in bringing our custom rackmount
enclosures to the UL standard. Contact one of our Chassis
Plans for more info.
There are two levels of required
compliance; home/office and industrial. No piece
of equipment with a computer installed can be sold in
the US unless it has been properly tested for compliance
with the appropriate FCC regulations. There are
strict laws and high fines associated with these laws.
Each piece of computing equipment must be properly labeled
to show it is in compliance.
FCC Part 15, Subpart J, Class
A covers industrial computers. Class B covers
home and office computers.
An industrial computer is
intended for use in a non-home and non-office environment
and can be identified by either form factor being incompatible
with home use or a price that would not be identified
with the home market. Class A would apply to industrial
computers.
A home or office computer
is your typical clone computer manufactured by IBM,
Compaq, Dell, Gateway, or the myriad little local computer
resellers. Class B would apply here.
Class A simply requires the
subject equipment be tested to verify the emissions
are below the published requirements. The equipment
vendor must assure the equipment passes these tests.
The results of the tests do not need to be submitted
to the FCC and can be simply kept in a file so that
if there is a problem, they can be shown to the FCC
to demonstrate the equipment was tested and was compliant
at some time in the past.
Class B is more rigorous with
a lower ceiling on the test limits. Class B requires
the test results be sent to the FCC along with an application
for issuance of a registration number. The FCC
may accept the results of the testing lab or they may
require the equipment be submitted to them for additional
testing.
Testing to Class A is a fairly
simple procedure requiring one day or less in a test
facility and should cost under $1000.
An `approved' chassis can
be populated with any tested and compliant boards and
still be in compliance. That is, each shippable
configuration does not need to be tested as long as
all the parts have been tested at some time in the past.
- Electrical Criteria
- Bond Clamp Retention
- AC Fault Test
- Mechanical Criteria
- Cable Clamping
- Sheath Retention
- Cable Flexing
- Cable Torsion
- Vertical Drop
- Compression
- Impact
- Central Membrane (CM) Protrusion
- Environmental Criteria
- Accelerated Thermal Aging
- Assembly
- Temperature and Humidity
- Freeze/Thaw
- Weather Tightness
- Water Resistance
- Corrosion Resistance
- Chemical Resistance
- Insect Resistance
- Ultraviolet Resistance
- Brush Fire Resistance
- Conditional Requirements
- Bullet Resistance
- Cable Core Blocking Ability
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Environmental Testing Chamber
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