RE: ANSI standard

From: <Al_Davidson-CASR04_at_email.domain.hidden>
Date: 7 Dec 95 08:21:53 -0600

The ANSI and IEEE numbers are identical, almost. They are usually referred
to as IEEE C95.1-1991 and ANSI C95.1-1992 reflecting the body who is
setting/adopting the standard and the year in which they did it.

Allen Davidson
Member of the Technical Staff
Motorola Inc

________________________________________________________
To: stanley_at_spri.levels.unisa.edu.au_at_INTERNET
Cc: nec-list_at_ee.ubc.ca_at_INTERNET
From: lapin_at_casbah.acns.nwu.edu_at_INTERNET on Thu, Dec 7, 1995 12:33 AM
Subject: Re: ANSI standard

X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.4 PL24alpha3]
Content-Type: text

The new standard was developed by IEEE and adopted by ANSI. I'm not
sure of the ANSI number but the IEEE standard was adopted in 1991,
with ANSI getting on board in 1992.

Greg Lapin
Northwestern University
g.lapin_at_ieee.org

>
> Hi,
>
> Can anyone tell me what is the latest ANSI C95.1-1982 standard please?
> I am aware that ANSI C95.1-1982 has being revised but not sure of the
> new proposed standard.
> For those who don't know what ANSI C95.1-1982 is, it is a standard that
> states or recommends the amount of humans' exposure to RF energy.
>
> Stanley
> -------
>
>
Received on Thu Dec 07 1995 - 17:12:00 EST

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.2.0 : Sat Oct 02 2010 - 00:10:36 EDT