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The Special International Committee on Radio Interference (abbreviated CISPR from the French name of the organization, Comité international spécial des perturbations radioélectriques) is concerned with developing norms for detecting, measuring and comparing electromagnetic interference in electric devices. Its members are partially also in the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC). It was founded in 1934. The CISPR is divided into six subcommittees, each dealing with a different topic:
CISPR's publications are basically norms regarding measurement of radiated and conducted interference. They specify cable lengths, measurement device configurations and grounding measures, so that results become more comparable. The norms also concern themselves with immunity from external interference. With the CISPR norms, companies can require compliance to a specific norm from a supplier, instead of doing all the measurements internally (and having to develop an internal norm to be able to compare their own measurements). Until now, over thirty CISPR standards have been published. Some of the better known are:
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