Thanks for giving me the opportunity to get back into the debate Geoff,
Strange - I'd have thought the standard practice of manufacturers marking their devices as class 2 (not class 1) and a note in the service records to say that particular class 1 devices have "non-accessible earth" would suffice - saving the time and trouble of labelling with sticky-dots.
We shouldn't just decide to reclassify equipment for testing purposes because the tests may then no longer be appropriate for the IUT nor rely on sticky-dots to guide others' methods. In my view discussion in this matter is only necessary when there's disagreement as to whether those sticking on the dots are considered to be making sound decisions or not.
This is the problem with automated testing - individuals should be able to program testers for this scenario or, if testers aren't flexible enough to be programmed to do this, and have enough knowledege to know when to ignore insignificant "fails", e.g. when there's no protective earth accessible for testing purposes.
I guess that the lack of a dot implies that there's no earth therefore the device is tested to class 2 - dodgy practice if this is the case - especially if it's involving class 1 medical with no accessible earth but with applied parts, etc.
Or, in fact, with class 2 devices where you might need to do an earth leakage test because it has a functional earth? Automated testers set up inappropriately for class 2 tests would then miss tests (as well as earth bond) that are necessary for class 1.
I certainly wouldn't want to carry the can for testing devices inappropriately to class 2 with an automated tester because someone else has told me that if there's no green dot, hence no accessible earth, then I should test to class 2 - even if the device is class 1. What about the decision RE: functional earth leakage measurements on class 2 with functional earth? Do we use a red dot for that?
I wouldn't be inclined to use this sort of system because those doing the testing should be knowledgeable and skilled enough to at least identify the classification of devices from documentation, inspection and experience - the method of testing used shouldn't rely on one person (nobody's infallible) deciding which equipment has a sticky label or not and where it should go.
If there's doubt about safety testing any device then individuals should ask for guidance from documentation, colleagues, the manufacturer, MHRA or take the time to inspect the device more thoroughly in my opinion, i.e. obtain the knowledge and then share it perhaps.
Sticky labels are not infallible they can come off, be peeled off (when operators clean the equipment?) or be relocated incorrectly. Manufacturers markings are required to be clear and indelible. If they're not then the equipment shouldn't be accepted onto the inventory.
The docmentation on the worksheet should identify the classification so there shouldn't really be a need to identify class or where the earth should be tested because this should be indicated in the service record for future reference.
Labels are a greater waste of time and would indicate to me, if I were being asked to do the EST, that perhaps the individuals that doing the testing cannot be trusted. Also it's another example of the same old scenario of the automated tester influencing the test methods rather than the operator. e.g.
Accordingly, we had to treat them as Type B class II for the purpose of electrical safety testing with our BIO TEK 601 analyser.
In Ian's example, reading in-between the lines, then class 2 testing is selected for the sake of obtaining a pass when there's a non-accessible earth on a class 1 device, for example, rather than producing a fail due to a lack of earth bond, when testing to class 1. In this case is the earth leakage, whether it be functional or protective (since there's apparently confusion over it's classification) be performed by the Biotek 601?
In my experience that's usually the reason for some individuals testing to class 2 rather than class 1. My knowledge and waffle RE: safety is applied to systems mainly - that's where the potential to put together a system, from a combination of devices, can become potentially risky to the patient. One green dot on a video stack to indicate where I should measure earth is not enough - there'd be dots all over the shop.
Anybody competent should be able to determine class1, class2, with or without accessible, functional or protective earth without the requirement for additional markings, i.e green dots. If not then, in my opinion, they shouldn't be involved in testing patient-connected devices and certainly not complex systems, such as video-endoscopy systems or multi-parameter, multi-module, monitoring systems used in theatre or for invasive procedures.
These involve multiple, interconnected, medical devices and may be used combined with a laser, ESU and other medical devices such as patient monitoring with invasive applied parts, etc. The sort of setups where poor safety testing can miss problems with inadequate seperation, excessive leakage currents and earthing problems.
Fotunately, most of the time, EST comes down to visual inspection and common sense - but the electrical measurements bit shouldn't just mean switching off our brains and relying on sticky-dots and an automated tester to do
all the work.