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Certification Introduction:
RCM certification is a mark introduced by Australia and New Zealand
to achieve unified marking of electrical products. The mark is a
trademark owned by the regulatory agencies of Australia and New
Zealand. It indicates that the product meets both safety and EMC
requirements and is mandatory.
RCM certification controlled electrical products are mainly divided
into non-regulated and controlled products, because not all
products marked with RCM need to be registered. Non-regulated
products do not need to be registered. Currently, only Level 3
electrical products need to be registered. There are a total of 56
major categories including power adapters, vacuum cleaners and
other high-risk categories.
Under normal circumstances, the RCM logo should be displayed on the
product label. The agent number was originally required. The new
RCM does not need to indicate the agent number.
After this requirement was released on March 1, 2013, there was a
three-year transition period, and it became mandatory on March 1,
2016. Therefore, manufacturers must strictly follow the
requirements to perform tests related to this standard. Due to the
new RCM requirements, which are different from the previous ones,
in addition to the fact that importers will bear the high risk of
substandard product quality, importers need to pay registration
fees and annual login fees, so there will be very few companies
that can provide this service.
Basic information about RCM certification
Nature of certification: compulsory certification
Whether factory inspection is required: No
Is local representative required: Yes
Certificate validity period: 2 years, 3 years, 5 years
Application period: one week after obtaining the safety
certification certificate and C-Tick/EMC report
Applicable areas
Australia, New Zealand, Nauru, Fiji, Solomon Islands, Kiribati,
Federated States of Micronesia, Tuvalu, Tonga, Marshall Islands,
Vanuatu, Papua New Guinea, Samoa.
RCM= Safety + EMC + Importer Declaration
1. Safety (product safety certification)
Product safety certification consists of two parts: electrical
products are divided into regulated electrical products (Prescribed
Product) and non-prescribed products (Non-prescribed product).
1). Regulated electrical products are classified according to
AS/NZS4417.2, including electric heating equipment, refrigeration
equipment, power tools, parts, etc. Three of the issuing entities,
Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria, are the most active in
the certification process. Regulated electrical appliances must
obtain a Certificate of Approval issued by the monitoring
department, and must have a specified mark (certificate number must
be stamped) . The first letter of the certificate number shows
which state or territory the certificate was issued by. like:
(1) Q04051 (Queensland) --- Q Number
(2) W2015 (Western Australia) --- W Number
(3) V03101 (Victoria) --- ESV Certificate V Number
(4) NSW18099 (New South Wales) --- DOFT Certificate NSW Number
2). Non-regulated electrical appliances can be sold directly
without certification, but the manufacturer must ensure that the
electrical safety of the product complies with the Australian
standard AS/NZS3820:1998 (Essential Safety Requirements for Low
Voltage Electrical Equipment); the monitoring department will issue
compliance certificates to products that meet the standard
requirements. Certificate (Certificate of Suitability). Electrical
products that have obtained a certificate of compliance can be
marked with a certificate number. The last letter of the
certificate shows which state or region the certificate was issued
by, such as:
(1) CS/431/Q (Queensland)
(2) CS/108/NSW (New South Wales)
2. EMC (Electromagnetic Compatibility)
Australia's electromagnetic compatibility compliance plan was
developed in accordance with the Radio Communications Act 1992 and
covers a wide range of products, including motor-driven and heating
electrical products, power tools and similar products, lamps and
similar equipment, Television receivers and audio equipment,
information technology products, industrial scientific and medical
instruments and equipment, ignition engines and arc welding
equipment, etc. The plan divides products into three categories
based on the risk of electromagnetic interference produced by the
products. Products in the second and third categories must be
marked with a C-Tick. However, no matter which category the product
belongs to, it must comply with relevant EMC standards.
Category 1 products: Products that have only a minor impact on
devices using the wireless spectrum, such as manual switches,
simple relays, brushless squirrel-cage induction motors, AC
power/power transformers, resistors, etc. Such products can
voluntarily apply to use the C-Tick mark when producing and selling
them.
Category II products: Products that have a greater impact on
devices that use wireless spectrum, such as microprocessors or
clock-connected digital devices, rectifiers or slip ring motors,
arc welding equipment, switching power supplies, light regulators
and motors Telecommunications terminal equipment of the speed
controller, information technology (CISPR 22) category (changed
from Category 3 to Category 2 since November 7, 2003).
Category 3 products: Products that have a serious impact on devices
using wireless spectrum, such as industrial, scientific and medical
instruments and equipment Group 2 (CISPR11).
Application process
1. A third-party laboratory evaluates the product and determines
the testing standards to be implemented;
2. If there are non-conformities in the test, the laboratory will
rectify the product to comply with and meet the requirements of
Australian standards;
3. If the test passes, a test report will be issued;
4. Submit the test report to the Australian certification agency
for document review;
5. Australia passes the review and issues the RCM certificate;
6. Customers can complete the Australian website registration by
themselves or by the laboratory;
SAA certification controls safety regulations, C-Tick certification
controls EMC and radio products, and A-Tick certification controls
telecommunications products. The RCM mark is a certification mark
launched in 2013. After a product obtains safety certification and
electromagnetic compatibility registration, it can obtain the RCM
mark through the safety certification regulatory agency. Starting
from March 1, 2016, all electronic and electrical products sold
must uniformly use the RCM mark; the A-tick and C-tick marks will
be replaced. RCM can be understood as a registration system,
including SAA and C-TICK.
(1) If the product has CB and country differences, you can directly
transfer the Safety Certificate. Coupled with the EMC part, agents
can help make announcements. The product can be sold to Australia
and marked with RCM Mark.
(2) Safety Certificate: When applying for the safety part, if the
product is a direct plug in, you need to do the AU Plug Test (Test
Standard: AS/NZS 3112: 2004) for the product. If the product is a
Desktop, you do not need to do this test. .
(3) EMCReport --- It can be C-Tick Report (TestStandard: AS/NZS
CISPR 22: 2002) or CEEMC Report.
1. The RCM logo needs to be added to the product when it is
released. Please note that this requirement was announced by
Australia on April 19, 2013;
2. When the direct-plug adapter undergoes RCM certification, the
plug must be randomly tested;
3. Lamp products: such as T8 LED lamps and fluorescent lamps, which
can be directly replaced by users, pose a greater safety risk and
require samples to be sent to Australia for evaluation;
4. The time will be different for different issuing agencies.