PRICES include / exclude VAT
Homepage>BS Standards>25 MANUFACTURING ENGINEERING>25.180 Industrial furnaces>25.180.10 Electric furnaces>BS EN 61307:2011 Industrial microwave heating installations. Test methods for the determination of power output
Sponsored link
immediate downloadReleased: 2011-08-31
BS EN 61307:2011 Industrial microwave heating installations. Test methods for the determination of power output

BS EN 61307:2011

Industrial microwave heating installations. Test methods for the determination of power output

Format
Availability
Price and currency
English Secure PDF
Immediate download
191.18 EUR
You can read the standard for 1 hour. More information in the category: E-reading
Reading the standard
for 1 hour
19.12 EUR
You can read the standard for 24 hours. More information in the category: E-reading
Reading the standard
for 24 hours
57.35 EUR
English Hardcopy
In stock
191.18 EUR
Standard number:BS EN 61307:2011
Pages:20
Released:2011-08-31
ISBN:978 0 580 70047 7
Status:Standard
DESCRIPTION

BS EN 61307:2011


This standard BS EN 61307:2011 Industrial microwave heating installations. Test methods for the determination of power output is classified in these ICS categories:
  • 25.180.10 Electric furnaces
IEC 61307:2011 specifies test methods for the determination of the available microwave output power and the efficiency of frequency conversion from the electrical input in industrial microwave heating installations. This standard also specifies test methods for assessing the microwave power deposition in the microwave workload - the microwave workload power, in microwave-only installations. This standard is applicable to industrial microwave heating equipment and installations in the frequency range from 300 MHz to 300 GHz. This third edition cancels and replaces the second edition published in 2006. It constitutes a technical revision. This edition includes the following significant technical changes with respect to the previous edition:
a) it covers how to measure not only the microwave power output of all typical equipment designs, but also the system efficiency, including the standby and hibernation modes;
b) the handling of the former A and B types of equipment is replaced by measurements of the available microwave power output and microwave workload power, respectively.