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RoHS (Restriction of Hazardous Substance) Directive
2002/95/EC and
WEEE (Waste Electrical and Electronic
Equipment) Directive 2002/96/EC
On 1st July 2006, the RoHS and
WEEE directives came into force. Adax has completed its RoHS and
WEEE planning, including: the updating of the product build specifications;
the creation and maintenance of a database containing Material
Declarations and Letters of Warranty for every RoHS device used;
and the purchasing of lead free parts. Adax is manufacturing two
types of RoHS compliant boards: one with lead free solder and one
with leaded solder (as exempted from the requirements of Article
4(1) of the RoHS Directive). Both boards use the same lead free
parts.
No Change to Form, Fit or Function
The RoHS and WEEE requirements
have not required any changes
to be made to the form, fit or
function of the Adax HDCII and
ATM cards.
Part Numbers
RoHS compliant Adax products that
use the Exemptions of the RoHS Directive (as detailed below),
and in particular are manufactured with leaded solder, have an “NE” (Network
Exempt) suffix added to the current product number.
RoHS compliant Adax products that do not use the exemptions, I.
E those that are manufactured with lead-free solder, have an “R” suffix
added to the current product number.
Please Note: As of 1st July 2006, Adax will ship ‘NE’ boards
as standard to customers requesting RoHS compliant HDCII and ATM
products. Due to limited customer demand, Adax will only build ‘R’ boards
for special orders subject to extended delivery times.
Exemptions
Adax products with the R suffix
are built in accordance with Article 4(1) of Directive 2002/95/EC
on the restriction of the use of certain hazardous substances
in electrical and electronic equipment provides ‘that from
1 July 2006, new electrical and electronic equipment put on the
market does not contain lead, mercury, cadmium, hexavalent chromium,
PBB or PBDE. ’
Adax products with the NE suffix are built in accordance with Article
5(1)(b) of Directive 2002/95/EC which provides that materials and
components can be exempted from the substance restrictions contained
in Article 4(1) if their elimination or substitution via design
changes or materials and components which do not require any of
the materials or substances referred to therein is technically or
scientifically impracticable, or where the negative environmental,
health and/or consumer safety impacts caused by substitution outweigh
the environmental, health and/or consumer safety benefits thereof.
The Annex to the Directive lists a limited number of applications
of lead, mercury, cadmium and hexavalent chromium, which are exempted
from the requirements of Article 4(1). Despite the use of the word ‘Exemption’ products
built using the following exemptions
are RoHS compliant:
- Mercury in compact fluorescent lamps not exceeding
5 mg per lamp.
- Mercury in straight
fluorescent lamps for general
purposes not exceeding:
- halophosphate 10 mg
- triphosphate with normal
lifetime 5 mg
- triphosphate with long
lifetime 8 mg.
- Mercury
in straight fluorescent lamps
for special purposes.
- Mercury
in other lamps not specifically
mentioned in this Annex.
- Lead in glass
of cathode ray tubes, electronic components
and fluorescent tubes.
- Lead as
an alloying element in steel
containing up to 0,35 %lead
by weight, aluminium
containing up to 0,4 %lead
by weight and as a copper alloy
containing up to 4 %lead
by weight.
- Lead in high
melting temperature
type solders (i.e. tin-lead
solder alloys containing
more than 85
%lead),
- lead in solders
for servers,
storage and storage array systems
(exemption granted
until 2010),
- lead in solders
for network infrastructure
equipment for
switching, signalling, transmission
as well as network
management for telecommunication,
- lead in electronic
ceramic parts
(e.g.piezoelectronic
devices).
- Cadmium plating except for applications
banned under
Directive 91/338/EEC
(1)amending Directive 76/769/EEC
(2) relating to restrictions
on the marketing
and use of certain dangerous
substances and preparations.
- Hexavalent chromium as
an anti-corrosion of the
carbon steel cooling
system in absorption
refrigerators.
- Within the procedure
referred
to in Article 7(2),the
Commission
shall evaluate the applications
for:
- Deca BDE,
- mercury
in straight
fluorescent lamps for
special
purposes,
- lead
in solders for servers,
storage
and storage array
systems,
network infrastructure equipment for
switching,
signalling,
transmission
as well as network management
for telecommunications
(with a
view to setting
a specific
time limit
for this exemption),and
- light
bulbs,
as a matter
of priority
in order
to establish as soon as
possible
whether these items are to be amended
accordingly.
The exemptions in this Annex pertinent to the Adax products include
item numbers: 5, 7 and 10.
On the basis of Article 5(1)(b) of Directive 2002/95/EC the Commission
has also received from industry additional requests, with substantiated
evidence, for applications to be exempted from the requirements
of the directive:
- Lead in tin whisker resistant coatings for fine pitch applications.
- Lead bound in glass as a function part of electrical or
electronic equipment.
- Solders
containing lead and/or cadmium
for specific applications.
- Hexavalent
chromium (CR V1) passivation
coatings.
- Lead in connectors,
flexible printed circuits,
and flexible flat cables.
- Cadmium
as doping material in avalanche
photodiodes (APDs) for the optical
fiber communication
systems.
- Low melting point
alloys containing
lead
- Galvanized steel
containing up to
0.35% lead by weight
and aluminum with an unintended
lead content up to 0.4% lead
by weight in electrical
and electronic equipment.
Letter of Warranty
The Adax Letter of Warranty for
RoHS and WEEE compliance can
be downloaded here: download
WEEE (Waste Electronic and Electrical Equipment) Compliance Progress:
Adax now uses WEEE-compliant packaging
materials for all shipments to
Europe, and Product Manuals include details about the recovery
and recycling of Adax products. All
Adax WEEE compliant products
and packaging display the crossed through ‘wheeled-bin’ marking
as shown here.
Non RoHS Compliant Products
RoHS versions of certain, older,
Adax products cannot be produced
due to the unavailability of lead-free parts. This includes the
APC, APC7 and ACT boards, and
old versions of the HDC and ATM
boards. If you are an existing Adax customer and want to continue
using these products after
June 2006, you must contact your
Account Manager. It is possible that Adax can continue to supply
you with these products after
June 2006 in certain circumstances.
In particular, Adax may be able to accommodate your requests if
you intend to use the Directive
Exemptions for existing equipment,
or if you are supplying the products outside of the EU to countries
that are not implementing
the directive.
For more information on how RoHS and WEEE affect the Adax products
that you currently have deployed
or intend to purchase please email rohs@adax.co.uk or
contact your Account Manager.
For additional
information about RoHS and
WEEE, please visit: http://ec.europa.eu/environment/waste/weee_index.htm
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