IEEE, the world’s largest professional organization dedicated to advancing technology for humanity, today announced that two Accredited Standards Committee on Electromagnetic Compatibility (ASC-C63®) standards have been ‘incorporated by reference’ into the updated U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) rules by which telecommunications certification bodies (TCBs) authorize radio-frequency (RF) equipment. The FCC’s reference of the two ASC C63® standards impacts the work of wireless-device manufacturers, test laboratories, and trade associations globally.
The two ASC C63® standards referenced in FCC 14-208, ‘Authorization of Radiofrequency Equipment’, propose procedures for testing the compliance of a wide variety of wireless transmitters. ANSI C63.4-2014, American National Standard for Methods of Measurement of Radio-Noise Emissions from Low-Voltage Electrical and Electronic Equipment in the Range of 9 kHz to 40 GHz, defines measurement procedures for unintentional radiators such as computers and various digital electronic devices. ANSI C63.10-2013, American National Standard of Procedures for Compliance Testing of Unlicensed Wireless Devices, for intentional radiators such as remote controls, cordless phones, hands-free microphones, some medical devices, security devices, and other unlicensed wireless devices.
‘The rules we are adopting will facilitate the continued rapid introduction of new and innovative products to the market while ensuring that these products do not cause harmful interference to each other or to other communications devices and services,’ as taken from FCC 14-208, which became effective 13 July 2015. Its rules in July 2016 will become mandatory for RF devices used in the United States.