BS EN ISO 16230-1:2015
$142.49
Agricultural machinery and tractors. Safety of higher voltage electrical and electronic components and systems – General requirements
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2015 | 26 |
This part of ISO 16230 is applicable to tractors and self-propelled ride-on machines, mounted implements, and towed implements used in agriculture and forestry. This part of ISO 16230 specifies general requirements that relate to the protection and safety of operators and bystanders on machines with onboard voltages in the range of 50 V AC to 1000 V AC and 75 V DC to 1500 V DC. This part of ISO 16230 applies to electrical equipment and parts of the electrical equipment on such machines and includes general requirements related to the protection and safety of operators, bystanders, and first responders.
This part of ISO 16230 deals with significant hazards, hazardous situations, and events, as listed in Annex A, relevant to this agricultural machinery when used as intended and under the conditions of misuse foreseeable by the manufacturer during normal operation and service.
This part of ISO 16230 is not applicable to the following:
-
specific design elements of external interfaces (e.g. the interface between a tractor and implement);
-
externally powered equipment (e.g. line powered equipment, equipment without on-board power generation);
-
purpose built forestry machines;
-
stationary electrical generators.
This part of ISO 16230 is not applicable to machines which are manufactured before the date of its publication.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
4 | European foreword |
5 | Annex ZA (informative) Relationship between this International Standard and the Essential Requirements of EU Directive 2006/42/EC |
8 | Foreword |
9 | Introduction |
10 | 1 Scope 2 Normative references |
11 | 3 Terms and definitions |
13 | 4 General requirements 4.1 Standards 4.2 Component selection 5 Protection of persons against electric shock 5.1 General 5.2 Protection against direct contact 5.2.1 Protection measures |
14 | 5.2.2 Enclosure requirements 5.3 Connectors 5.4 Protection against indirect contact 5.4.1 IT system 5.4.2 General |
15 | 5.5 Protection by potential equalization (equipotential bonding) 5.5.1 Potential equalization for components 5.5.2 Potential equalization for sockets 5.6 Isolation resistance requirements 5.6.1 Electric power train consisting of separate DC or AC buses 5.6.2 Electric power train consisting of combined DC- and AC-buses |
16 | 5.6.3 Insulation monitoring 5.7 Parasitic coupling 5.7.1 Protective measures — Parasitic coupling 5.8 Test procedure for the protection against electric shock 6 Additional requirements for electrical sockets connecting to implements or attachments 6.1 Mated connection — General 6.2 Connect/Disconnect |
17 | 6.3 Protection of electrical equipment 6.3.1 Short-circuits and overloads 6.3.2 Heat generating components 7 Conductors and cables used in higher voltage distribution — General requirements 7.1 Identification Colours 7.2 Identification of conductors for multicore cable 7.3 Creepage and clearance distances 7.4 Cable and wire insulation 7.5 Cross-sectional area |
18 | 7.6 Multicore cables 7.7 Wiring that flexes 7.8 Flame retardancy 7.9 Protection of cables 7.9.1 Outer covering 7.9.2 General requirements — Protection 8 Wiring practices — General 8.1 Fastening and clamping |
19 | 8.2 Routing 9 System requirements 9.1 Power on/power off procedure 9.1.1 Active state 9.1.2 Deactivated state 9.1.3 System state indication 9.2 Fault modes (indication) 10 Marking and symbols |
20 | 11 Information for use 12 Service literature 12.1 General 12.2 Reduction of electrical hazards while servicing 12.2.1 Description of effects of electricity on the human body 12.2.2 Statements regarding risk reduction |
21 | 12.3 Special procedures 12.3.1 Machine identification 12.3.2 First responder information 13 Technical documentation 13.1 General 13.2 Information to be provided |
22 | 13.3 Overview diagrams and function diagrams 13.4 Circuit diagrams 13.5 Parts list |
23 | Annex A (informative) List of hazards |
24 | Bibliography |