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Date:      Mon, 20 Dec 1999 11:49:45 -0800 (PST)
From:      Matthew Dillon <dillon@apollo.backplane.com>
To:        Wes Peters <wes@softweyr.com>
Cc:        freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Cool little 100BaseTX switch - they're coming down in price
Message-ID:  <199912201949.LAA16719@apollo.backplane.com>
References:  <199912190410.UAA01049@apollo.backplane.com>  <385C60FC.7613CB55@bellatlantic.net> <19991218225758.A23729@futuresouth.com> <199912190556.AAA08484@whizzo.transsys.com> <199912191943.LAA06826@apollo.backplane.com> <385D47D3.FCEE9EAB@softweyr.com> <199912192127.NAA09156@apollo.backplane.com> <385DDE7A.1A0ED466@softweyr.com>

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:> :"everyone" here).
:> 
:>     This is not true at all. 
:
:Oh, and how many products have you passed through FCC/EC/Japanese environmental
:certification?  None, apparently.

    Four in the last 15 years.  I've been involved with in-home electronic
    management systems and believe me, all that shit needs FCC and UL.

:>     supply inside verses depending on a DC adapter does not make FCC cert.
:>     more difficult.
:
:You're wrong.  It nearly always requires adding some sort of faraday cage
:around the power supply, and often around the entire enclosure due to the
:difficulty in isolating the 60 Hz harmonics within the power supply in
:small equipment.  For a small, cheap hub or switch this just kills the 
:
:Wes Peters                                                         Softweyr LLC
:wes@softweyr.com                                           http://softweyr.com/

    This is old news - modern switching power supplies (and we are talking
    basically a chip, an inductor, and two big caps here) switch at 50 KHz
    or higher, which makes things a whole lot easier.  No 60Hz humm, no 
    vibration - hell, you can even run the frequency up past 100 MHz and
    not hear a peep out of it.  Modern switching power supply chips also 
    have most of the shutdown circuitry required, including temperature and
    current limiting, slow-start, and other features.  Add in few small caps
    or perhaps a ferrite bead or two to filter out HF on the DC output and 
    you are all done.  Whoopie.

    Whoopie.  The only time we've ever needed a faraday cage has been in a 
    cable network unit for a hotel, and the video switching channels for the
    in-home unit - to protect sensitive RF circuitry from the rest of the
    world.

    If there is a specific reason you believe that putting a small switching
    supply inside the box requires extra FCC work, I'm all ears.

					-Matt
					Matthew Dillon 
					<dillon@backplane.com>


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