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Expert Insights

The iNARTE Informer – June 2012

The process of merging iNARTE into the RABQSA International organization is now well under...

Environmental ESD: Part 2 – Thunderstorms and Lightning Discharges

Associate Professor Neils Jonassen authored a bi-monthly static column that appeared in Compliance Engineering...

Robotics and EMC Engineering

I learned about a new robot from Boston Dynamics through IEEE Spectrum called Petman1....

Tornados and Product Safety

Just as the National Weather Service intensified tornado warnings to save lives, your product safety labels must cut through information overload to motivate action. Learn why clear, impactful warnings using ANSI/ISO standards and powerful graphics are critical—because when it comes to safety communication, lives depend on it.

The iNARTE Informer – May 2012

In April 2011, we reported that iNARTE had signed an agreement to become affiliated...
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The iNARTE Informer – April 2012

This year, 2012, marks iNARTE’s 30th birthday. Over 30 years, we have certified more...

Who, What, and Where

What do cruise ship safety signs and your product labels have in common? More than you might think. Discover how the Costa Concordia disaster reveals four critical principles for designing effective safety label systems that could save lives on your equipment.

The First Axiom of System-Product Design

Think EMC is just about meeting regulations? Think again. Discover how electromagnetic compatibility's true purpose—ensuring systems work harmoniously with themselves—revolutionized modern electronics design.

Measuring Capacitor Self-inductance and ESR

This column describes a simple method to measure capacitor parasitic parameters (ESR and inductance) using a pulse generator and oscilloscope. This helps evaluate capacitor performance for applications sensitive to these parameters without requiring expensive network analyzers.

Clash of the Titans

When engineering fixes meet business pressures, technical integrity is put to the test. This article reveals how a simple cable break dramatically degraded EMC performance by up to 40dB, yet management chose the convenient answer over empirical evidence—a cautionary tale for compliance engineers everywhere.
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