CISPR 10-1992 PDF
Name in English:
St CISPR 10-1992
Name in Russian:
Ст CISPR 10-1992
Original standard CISPR 10-1992 in PDF full version. Additional info + preview on request
Full title and description
CISPR 10-1992 — Radio disturbance characteristics and methods of measurement for specified classes of electrical equipment. This document (published under the CISPR/IEC framework) defines measurement methods, test arrangements and limits relevant to radio-frequency disturbance (conducted and radiated) from certain categories of apparatus covered by the 1992 edition of the CISPR 10 series.
Abstract
This product page summarises CISPR 10 published in 1992. The standard sets out recommended measurement techniques and disturbance limits used at the time for evaluating radio-frequency emissions from the equipment classes within its scope. It is primarily a measurement-methods standard intended to ensure repeatable, comparable test results for compliance assessment and laboratory inter-comparison. Users should confirm whether a later edition or a different CISPR/IEC standard has since superseded specific requirements.
General information
- Status: Historic edition (1992). May be superseded by later CISPR/IEC publications; verify with the issuing body for current status.
- Publication date: 1992 (edition year).
- Publisher: CISPR under the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) framework (published as a CISPR/IEC document).
- ICS / categories: 33.100 — Electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) / Radio disturbance and immunity testing.
- Edition / version: 1992 edition.
- Number of pages: Approximately 15–40 pages depending on the national publication and formatting (official page count varies by printing).
Scope
Covers the recommended methods for measurement of radio-frequency disturbance (both radiated and conducted) produced by the equipment categories defined in the 1992 edition of CISPR 10. The scope focuses on establishing repeatable test set-ups, defining detector types and bandwidths, antenna and coupling arrangements, test-site requirements and reporting conventions so that test results are comparable between laboratories and with limit values given either in CISPR 10 itself or in related limits documents.
Key topics and requirements
- Definition of test arrangements for radiated and conducted emission measurements.
- Specification of measurement instrumentation, detectors, and receiver bandwidths.
- Requirements for test sites, e.g., open-area test sites, shielding and ground reference.
- Procedures for antenna placement, turntable use and near-field/ far-field considerations where applicable.
- Calibration and uncertainty considerations to ensure reproducible results.
- Reporting format for measurement data and conformity assessment notes.
- Reference to limit-setting practices and to companion standards that specify numerical emission limits for particular equipment classes.
Typical use and users
Engineers and test laboratory staff use CISPR 10-1992 as a reference for measurement methods when assessing radio disturbance produced by relevant equipment categories of that era. Regulators, conformity assessment bodies and manufacturers consult the standard when developing test programmes, performing emissions testing in EMC laboratories, or comparing historical test data. Research and academic groups may use the document to understand historical measurement practice evolution.
Related standards
Other CISPR and IEC publications commonly referenced in conjunction with CISPR 10-1992 include CISPR 11 (industrial, scientific and medical (ISM) equipment limits and methods), CISPR 12 (vehicle-related emissions), CISPR 14 series (household appliances and similar), CISPR 16 (measurement apparatus and site validation), and the IEC 61000 series on electromagnetic compatibility (immunity and additional measurement methods). Users should consult the latest editions of these standards for current measurement and limit requirements.
Keywords
CISPR 10, 1992, radio disturbance, electromagnetic compatibility, EMC testing, radiated emissions, conducted emissions, measurement methods, test site, antenna, instrument setup.
FAQ
Q: What is this standard?
A: CISPR 10-1992 is a 1992 edition CISPR document that describes methods for measuring radio-frequency disturbances from specified classes of electrical equipment and provides guidance on test arrangements and measurement practice.
Q: What does it cover?
A: It covers measurement techniques for radiated and conducted emissions, recommended instrumentation and detector settings, test-site and antenna arrangements, calibration and reporting conventions used to characterise radio disturbance from equipment in the scope of the 1992 edition.
Q: Who typically uses it?
A: EMC test engineers, laboratory technicians, compliance managers, standards developers and regulators consult the standard for guidance on performing and interpreting radio disturbance measurements.
Q: Is it current or superseded?
A: The 1992 edition is a historic edition. Many CISPR/IEC standards have been revised since 1992, and specific measurement procedures or limits may have been moved to other or later CISPR/IEC publications. Before relying on CISPR 10-1992 for compliance decisions, verify the current status and any superseding editions with the issuing body or the IEC/CISPR catalogue.
Q: Is it part of a series?
A: Yes — CISPR 10 is part of the broader CISPR family of standards covering radio disturbance and EMC measurement and limits. It is commonly used alongside CISPR 11, CISPR 16 and other CISPR/IEC standards that define limits, measurement apparatus and site validation.
Q: What are the key keywords?
A: Radio disturbance, emissions measurement, radiated emissions, conducted emissions, EMC testing, CISPR, measurement methods, test site, antenna, detector bandwidth.