Yes, test equipment requires FCC approval and proper labeling. At least
that was the case when I worked at HP. My friend in the Springs (HP's
o'scope division) had to gain FCC approval for o'scopes for HP and
Agilent. The emission levels are 10 dB above those for Part 15, Subpart B
(non-intentional radiators), Class A (Industrial, Scientific, and Medical -
medical is loosy-goosey), if I remember correctly - it's been a while.
Things may have changed since I've been "officially" retired (still consult
a bit for EMC/RFI problems) for some 12 years.
Dave - W?LEV
Dave - W?LEV
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
On Thu, Jan 13, 2022 at 9:05 PM Jim Lux <jim@...> wrote:
I'm not sure FCC approval is required for test equipment. Taking a gander
at an Owon function generator, a Fluke DMM, and a Tek oscilloscope here in
my office, I don't see FCC markings (e.g. no Part 15).
Yes, you can't really claim FCC approved. A more correct statement might
be "no FCC approval required"
--
*Dave - W?LEV*
*Just Let Darwin Work*