TÜV Rheinland has a new GS Mark
Our new GS mark – Two successful labels combined
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Our new GS Mark:
Starting June 1, 2006 |
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Existing GS Mark:
Customers can choose to use either the new mark or the existing one for the first year. |
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Latest Requirements
GS Mark Approval Procedure (Or you could download: )
Although GS stands for "Geprüfte
Sicherheit"(approved safety) you may think of it simply as
"German Safety".
The GS sticker indicates that the product was tested and certified
for safety according to the "German Equipment Safety Law" by a trustworthy, independent institute. The GS mark is a type-approval
mark, followed by periodic factory inspections covering the quality
system for the product's production. This law requires us, as the
certification body, to frequently check (usually annually or every
2 years, depending upon the certificate) whether the manufacturer
is able to maintain all the specifications of the tested product
in his mass production. During this factory inspection, we evaluate
the implementation of the quality system as relevant for the production,
the production environment, and production related testing and measurement
equipment.
The GS-mark can be obtained for a variety of product categories:
· electrical
and mechanical home appliances
· office
equipment such as copy machines, fax
machines, shredders, computers,
printers, etc.
· laboratory
and measuring equipment
· industrial
equipment and machines
· toys
· others
such as bicycles, helmets, ladders, furniture etc.
The GS mark, although not required by law, can and does make
a great deal of difference in cases where a product's malfunction
leads to an accident for which its manufacturer could be held
responsible under Germany's (and the EU's) strict product liability
laws. It is at the same time a convincing marketing aid creating
customer confidence and purchasing motivation. Manufacturers often
find it convenient and economical to obtain the GS-mark together
with the legally required CE Marking.
| WHY
IS THE GS MARK SO POPULAR? |
There is some confusion about the terms CE, CB and GS among non-European
manufacturers. We would like to give a short explanation to avoid
misunderstandings.
The GS mark is a voluntary test-mark. It is attached to a product
to highlight that a third party has tested its safety and that
a continuous production control is maintained. The GS-mark was
created to meet the demands of the industry, importers, distributors,
trade-houses, public insurance and consumer organizations in Germany.
It verifies the compliance of technical products with the safety
requirements of the German safety law. These organizations could
not afford to control the compliance of articles from all over
the world by themselves, but wanted to avoid uncertainty concerning
product liability and customer satisfaction. The idea of the GS-mark
was so successful, that it became not only a marketing criteria
but also found acceptance at consumers and distributors in other
countries in and outside of Europe.
On the other hand, CE Marking is a mandatory regulation and not
a test-mark. It was created by the European Union as a passport
for customs officials, showing that the product may be traded
freely within Europe. As it has to be attached to each and every
product within the scope of the European directives, it has no
special marketing value. Even before the introduction of CE marking,
products had to comply with each country's safety regulations.
Now they have to fulfil the same requirements as before, but have
to show it by CE-marking.
Not to be confused with the CE
Marking or the GS-mark, the CB
Scheme is neither a test-mark nor a marking. It is a mutual
recognition-scheme between test houses, based on IEC-standards.
The members of this scheme are issuing their test marks based
on CB-certificates and test reports which were issued by other
members of the scheme. Consequently, it is unnecessary to repeat
a complete type approval for each country. There maybe some additional
tests done to check for national deviations.
TÜV Rheinland can offer services as a GS-test house, as
a notified body for various European directives and as an NCB
in the CB-scheme.
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