mancow wrote:What about the Saber R ?
I think that is FM approved right, it has the Green dot label on the batteries. Those put out well over 2 watts?
mancow
The standards are slightly different from country to country. This may explain why CSA approved radios are mostly around 2 watts and FM approved radios are the typical 5 watts. It is not likely that the power level makes much of a difference. The inability to create a high-energy spark is what matters.
The items below are taken from Motorola’s catalogs. On their web site, they have some information that indicates that not all intrinsically safe radios meet the same requirements. This means that because a radio is intrinsically safe for some atmospheres, it may not meet the requirement of another atmosphere.
A Public Safety department that is looking for these types of radios should make sure that they actually meet the requirement for the locations that they expect to use these in.
Nand.
Here is some of Motorola’s info.
The government classifies as hazardous any areas where flammable gases such as acetylene, methane and hydrogen, or combustible dusts such as grain, coal, metals and fibers float in the air. When you work in these hazardous areas, both your two-way radio and the battery that powers it must be designed not to produce electrical sparks that could ignite those gases or dusts.
Radios and batteries that don’t produce such sparks are called “intrinsically safe.”
Motorola offers a wide selection of radios and batteries approved and certified by the agencies that regulate intrinsically safe equipment: the Factory Mutual Research Corporation (FM), the Canadian Standards Association (CSA), the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA), and/or CENELEC Approval Agencies.
Public Safety. Refineries. Recycling. Grain elevators. Chemical manufacturing. In these and other hazardous environments, a communication device built to help prevent igniting combustibles in the atmosphere is essential.
So, how are batteries made intrinsically safe? Actually it’s the battery and radio in combination, a system that makes designated Motorola batteries and radios intrinsically safe.
Motorola designs and builds a radio system to meet the specific requirements of a government or private Agency responsible for public protection. Most Motorola intrinsically safe products are certified by Factory Mutual (FM), an accredited, nationally recognized testing lab.
FM also writes and develops test methods for product safety standards, which include intrinsically safe standards. Other Agencies such as CENELEC, MSHA, or CSA may have other requirements specific to their standards.
Motorola two-way communication products are designed to meet these individual standards. To keep Motorola FM classified products functioning safely, users should consider the Motorola radio, battery, accessories and options as a whole system. Only Motorola Approved FM products should be used with intrinsically safe Motorola FM products.
Here are some guidelines to follow to keep your intrinsically safe Motorola radios working to protect you: You should not use a standard Motorola battery, or an FM-approved battery from another manufacturer, with an FM-approved Motorola radio. Likewise you should use only Motorola accessories and options that have been approved for that specific FM-approved Motorola radio.
Finally, you cannot field upgrade a Motorola radio to a FM-approval rating. Motorola intrinsically safe radio products are designed and manufactured as a unit and are only FM-approved direct from the factory.