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RoHS Compliance Course Demos IPC-1752 Implementation
September 16, 2005 |Estimated reading time: 1 minute
BANNOCKBURN, Ill. — It is one thing to say that your products are compliant with the EU's Restriction on Hazardous Substances (RoHS) Directive. It is another to be sure that your products, as well as those coming from your entire supply chain, contain compliant materials, parts and subparts. To help companies through this transition, IPC–Association Connecting Electronics Industries will host "Ensuring RoHS Compliance Through Materials Declaration Tools: Implementing IPC-1752," on November 9, 2005, in Northbrook, Ill.
Ensuring and being able to demonstrate compliance to European authorities requires gathering, organizing and storing a great deal of data. Course instructor Richard Kubin, chair of IPC's Supplier Declaration Committee and vice president of E2open, will guide attendees through IPC-1752, the industry-developed materials declaration standard; using the IPC-1752 forms to collect data from suppliers and demonstrate compliance; importing and exporting data from company systems to the standard forms; and completing a materials declaration form during a hands-on demonstration. The course also features third-party software solution demonstrations to help with implementing and integrating materials declarations, company systems and business-to-business data exchange. For the hands-on portion, IPC recommends attendees bring a laptop with Adobe Acrobat version 7.0 or higher. For more information, please visit www.ipc.org/MD1752. IPC plans to repeat the workshop on December 5, 2005, in Chelmsford, Mass.