Reifleman2
Mechanical
- Sep 4, 2012
- 30
I am in a bit of a pickle, frustrated and ill-equipped with UL and ETL standard knowledge to deal with this situation. I am hoping someone here has a deeper understanding of these certifying bodies and can help explain some things to me.
Back story: Small repair shop start-up, part of a larger company, in Alaska and therefore under UL certification requirements.
Our city UL inspector came in and has taken issue with 4 pieces of our equipment. His primary concern is the (in his words) "lack of a UL Assembly certification sticker. Individual UL recognized parts are unacceptable."
Breakdown of our equipment:
1) Large piece of polishing equipment. It is very old, from Europe, but has UL stickers within the control box. But none of the stickers say UL Assembly certified. Since it is so old, I can understand it might need some extra attention and a new 3rd party certification.
2) Polishing lathe with speed control (part # 1F800 from Grainger). I contacted Dayton and got UL certification numbers for the motor and the speed controller, and was even told it was undergoing inspection from UL to be certified as a whole assembly. He does not accept the UL numbers for each component, even though it is sold as a bundle through Grainger and Dayton.
Link to Grainger:
3) Downdraft bench with a single phase UL recognized motor. Again, the motor is the only piece of "electrical" equipment on the entire item, but because the entire assembly doesn't have a UL Assembly certification, he will not accept it.
4) Quincy 5 hp air compressor with attached tank. It has a UL Controller certification, but again, not an entire assembly certification. I contacted Quincy, and they laughed at the request from the inspector, saying that no organization is capable of UL certifying an entire compressor (tank, pistons, controllers etc.) and that it would be far too expensive and time consuming.
The inspector is telling us we must have all 4 pieces of equipment 3rd party assembly certified, and even recommended us going through ETL because it may be cheaper. I know very little about UL or ETL certifications, but it seems like this inspector is really trying to screw us over. None of our suppliers seem to understand why he is going into so much depth, especially from standard suppliers like Quincy and Dayton. I'm also concerned from an ethical standpoint, ie: is he getting kick backs from the 3rd party certifier's and forcing us to do something we shouldn't have to?
Any thoughts or advice?
Back story: Small repair shop start-up, part of a larger company, in Alaska and therefore under UL certification requirements.
Our city UL inspector came in and has taken issue with 4 pieces of our equipment. His primary concern is the (in his words) "lack of a UL Assembly certification sticker. Individual UL recognized parts are unacceptable."
Breakdown of our equipment:
1) Large piece of polishing equipment. It is very old, from Europe, but has UL stickers within the control box. But none of the stickers say UL Assembly certified. Since it is so old, I can understand it might need some extra attention and a new 3rd party certification.
2) Polishing lathe with speed control (part # 1F800 from Grainger). I contacted Dayton and got UL certification numbers for the motor and the speed controller, and was even told it was undergoing inspection from UL to be certified as a whole assembly. He does not accept the UL numbers for each component, even though it is sold as a bundle through Grainger and Dayton.
Link to Grainger:
3) Downdraft bench with a single phase UL recognized motor. Again, the motor is the only piece of "electrical" equipment on the entire item, but because the entire assembly doesn't have a UL Assembly certification, he will not accept it.
4) Quincy 5 hp air compressor with attached tank. It has a UL Controller certification, but again, not an entire assembly certification. I contacted Quincy, and they laughed at the request from the inspector, saying that no organization is capable of UL certifying an entire compressor (tank, pistons, controllers etc.) and that it would be far too expensive and time consuming.
The inspector is telling us we must have all 4 pieces of equipment 3rd party assembly certified, and even recommended us going through ETL because it may be cheaper. I know very little about UL or ETL certifications, but it seems like this inspector is really trying to screw us over. None of our suppliers seem to understand why he is going into so much depth, especially from standard suppliers like Quincy and Dayton. I'm also concerned from an ethical standpoint, ie: is he getting kick backs from the 3rd party certifier's and forcing us to do something we shouldn't have to?
Any thoughts or advice?