The criteria for the Degress of protection against water includes:
"Water drops | spray | splash | jets | powerful jets shall have no harmful effects"
In my interpretation this requires an assessment of both an enclosure and the item enclosed to assign a rating.
Take for example a commercial electronic enclosure such as the following picture, Obviously it will not stop water from entering.
If the boards inside the enclosure are protected, for example by a conformal coating, and are not damaged by the water that gets in through the slots in the enclosure...
then there are no harmful effects.
And the assembly will qualify for IPX1 or 2 or 3 or 4 or whatever, relative to the type of water it was tested to.
Right?
I'm trying to give the interpretation to suppliers who claim that their equipment is only IPX0 because the enclosure has holes.
I keep telling them that since all their boards are protected, in fact have passed IEC 60571 Salt Mist ST4 that involves spraying with salt water and washing it off under running water, they are easily IPx4 and probably 6.
"Water drops | spray | splash | jets | powerful jets shall have no harmful effects"
In my interpretation this requires an assessment of both an enclosure and the item enclosed to assign a rating.
Take for example a commercial electronic enclosure such as the following picture, Obviously it will not stop water from entering.
![URL]](https://res.cloudinary.com/engtips/image/fetch/w_800,c_lfill,q_auto,f_auto,g_faces:center/[URL unfurl="true"]http://ww1.prweb.com/prfiles/2011/11/15/8966437/combimet_second.jpg[/URL])
If the boards inside the enclosure are protected, for example by a conformal coating, and are not damaged by the water that gets in through the slots in the enclosure...
![URL]](https://res.cloudinary.com/engtips/image/fetch/w_800,c_lfill,q_auto,f_auto,g_faces:center/[URL unfurl="true"]http://etsmax.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/printed-circuit-board-condensation.jpg[/URL])
then there are no harmful effects.
And the assembly will qualify for IPX1 or 2 or 3 or 4 or whatever, relative to the type of water it was tested to.
Right?
I'm trying to give the interpretation to suppliers who claim that their equipment is only IPX0 because the enclosure has holes.
I keep telling them that since all their boards are protected, in fact have passed IEC 60571 Salt Mist ST4 that involves spraying with salt water and washing it off under running water, they are easily IPx4 and probably 6.