WELCOME TO OUR BLOG

We're sharing knowledge in the areas which fascinate us the most
click

CP1500 Series Compliance & Testing Guide: Applying IEC 60601-1-2, EN/UL 60335-1, and IEC/UL 62368-1 in AGV, Medical Cart, and Industrial Battery Charger Projects

By Lily April 1st, 2026 57 views
Explore how the CP1500 Series helps US OEMs and integrators simplify compliance and testing for AGV charging modules, medical carts, and industrial battery systems. This 1500W AC/DC battery charger platform combines 90–264Vac input, LiFePO4/NCM charging curves, CAN communication, and compliance-ready integration planning for faster RFQs.
CP1500 Series Compliance & Testing Guide: Applying IEC 60601-1-2, EN/UL 60335-1, and IEC/UL 62368-1 in AGV, Medical Cart, and Industrial Battery Charger Projects
Compliance & Testing | TPS ELECTRIC LLC

If your team is integrating a lithium battery charger into an AGV module, a medical cart or rack, or an industrial battery-powered subsystem, the fastest way to lose time is to treat compliance as a late-stage paperwork task. For CP1500 projects, the real win comes from aligning charger selection, end-product classification, cabling, and pre-compliance evidence from day one.

Series:
CP1500 battery charger family
Standards discussed:
IEC 60601-1-2, EN/UL 60335-1, IEC/UL 62368-1
Typical projects:
AGV charging modules, medical carts, industrial battery systems
Commercial goal:
Reduce rework and move faster to RFQ-ready integration

What this guide covers

This is not a generic standards summary. It is a selection and testing guide for engineering, sourcing, and integration teams that need a charger they can actually place into a real product program without creating avoidable compliance churn. The CP1500 family is a 1500W AC/DC charger platform with a single-phase 90–264Vac input range, built-in LFP and NCM charging curves, CAN communication, remote sense, remote ON/OFF, a 12V/1A auxiliary output, smart fan control, 5000 m operating altitude, and a compact 5.0" × 8.5" × 1.58" mechanical envelope. The uploaded brochure also states IEC/UL 62368-1 plus EN/UL 60335-1 safety approvals for CP1500, and Class B conducted/radiated emissions meeting IEC 60601-1-2 4th edition at the charger level. That combination is what makes CP1500 interesting for projects where the finished product may be classified differently from one program to the next.

The first principle is simple: choose the end-product compliance path before you freeze the charger integration details. IEC 62368-1 is not interchangeable with EN/UL 60335-1, and IEC 60601-1-2 is not a general safety certificate for every powered device. It is a medical EMC collateral standard that applies to medical electrical equipment and ME systems. In practice, that means your charger data can lower risk, but it does not replace finished-system evaluation. That is why this guide keeps coming back to the same questions: What is the finished product category? What environment will it operate in? What is the battery chemistry and series count? What must continue to work during EMC stress? And what evidence do you need ready before you book a compliance lab or send an RFQ?

Execution tip: Treat the charger as one approved building block inside a bigger system. The commercial advantage is not just having a spec-compliant component. It is shortening the path to a clean test plan, a cleaner FAT package, and fewer rounds of back-and-forth with purchasing, QA, and the lab.
Diagram showing how IEC UL 62368-1, EN UL 60335-1, and IEC 60601-1-2 map to different end-product compliance paths before selecting a CP1500 charger integration strategy.
Generated decision map: start with end-use classification, then map the charger into the correct safety and EMC route.

What each standard actually covers

IEC/UL 62368-1: safety for AV, ICT, and communication-oriented equipment

IEC 62368-1 is an energy-based safety standard for audio/video, information, and communication technology equipment. For many modern connected devices, control systems, gateways, battery-backed electronics, HMI-rich platforms, and communications-enabled industrial products, that framework is often the more natural safety route. The value for a charger buyer is that a CP1500 unit already sits on a recognized 62368-1 component-level basis, which can reduce the amount of component justification work inside your finished-product safety review.

EN/UL 60335-1: safety for household and similar electrical appliances

EN/UL 60335-1 is the route you should think about when the finished product behaves more like an appliance than like ICT or a medical system. That could include cleaning systems, service robots, mobility support equipment, or other electrically powered products sold into appliance-like channels or evaluated under appliance-family rules. For CP1500 users, the practical benefit is not that the charger decides your end category for you. The benefit is that you can integrate a charger platform whose approval basis already aligns with many appliance-style safety discussions, especially when procurement needs a cleaner compliance story early in the sourcing cycle.

IEC 60601-1-2: EMC for medical electrical equipment and ME systems

IEC 60601-1-2 is different. It is a medical EMC collateral standard linked to IEC 60601-1 and focuses on basic safety and essential performance in the presence of electromagnetic disturbances, as well as emissions from medical equipment and systems. That matters because CP1500 projects often show up in medical carts, racks, battery backup subsystems, and mobile clinical equipment where EMC failure is a schedule killer. If your system has alarms, charging states, communications, motion, or any function that must survive ESD, EFT, surge, radiated immunity, or conducted disturbances without unsafe behavior, you need a system-level plan. The charger’s stated EMC basis helps, but it is only one part of the medical EMC story.

Standard Best fit when the finished product is... What CP1500 contributes What still stays at system level
IEC/UL 62368-1 Connected, control-rich, ICT-like, or communications-oriented equipment Approved charger basis plus wide-input, compact, controllable power block Final enclosure, fire protection, wiring, user access, markings, end-product evaluation
EN/UL 60335-1 Household and similar appliance-style products or subsystems Charger approval basis aligned with appliance-family safety discussions Appliance-specific part 2 requirements, system hazards, user environment, final construction
IEC 60601-1-2 Medical carts, medical racks, battery-backed clinical platforms, ME systems Class B emissions statement and EMC-friendly starting point Essential performance, intended-use environment, immunity pass/fail criteria, full ME system test plan

What CP1500 gives you at charger level

The CP1500 family earns attention because it solves several integration problems at once. First, it covers a wide AC infrastructure range with 90–264Vac input, which is useful for US deployment where the charger might move between facilities, carts, docks, or service environments. Second, it supports both LiFePO4 and NCM packs with built-in charge curves, which is practical for OEMs or contract manufacturers who standardize mechanical and electrical interfaces but run more than one pack chemistry across programs. Third, it gives controls teams real integration hooks: CAN, remote sense, remote ON/OFF, and a 12V auxiliary rail. That combination helps if the charger must live inside a smarter subsystem rather than as a stand-alone wall-adjacent charger.

From a compliance workflow point of view, CP1500 is also compact enough to reduce packaging friction. Smaller charger volume often means shorter cable paths, cleaner grounding strategy, and more repeatable thermal zoning inside the host enclosure. Those details matter during emissions debugging and during any safety review that looks at spacing, harness routing, strain relief, touch-accessible areas, and serviceability. In other words, the charger is not just a power block. It is part of the physical compliance architecture of the finished machine.

Electrical and mechanical fit

  • 1500W AC/DC charger family with single-phase 90–264Vac input
  • 47–63Hz input frequency range
  • Up to 94% max efficiency on 48V models
  • Compact outline: 5.0" × 8.5" × 1.58"
  • 5000 m operating altitude

Integration and control fit

  • Built-in LFP and NCM charge curves
  • CAN communication for system coordination
  • Remote sense compensation and remote ON/OFF
  • 12V / 1A auxiliary output
  • Smart fan speed control
Important compliance nuance: the CP1500 brochure shows IEC/UL 62368-1 + EN/UL 60335-1 as the charger’s safety basis, and it separately states Class B conducted/radiated emissions meeting IEC 60601-1-2 4th edition. Do not translate that into “the full medical product is already certified.” Use it as evidence that the charger is a better starting point for a medical EMC plan.
Generated system diagram showing AC mains feeding the CP1500 charger, with connections to the battery pack and BMS, controller and HMI, and the compliance documentation package.
Generated integration map: CP1500 sits between the AC input, the battery pack/BMS, the host controller, and the compliance evidence package.

Application scenarios and compliance paths

AGV charging modules and battery service stations

AGV teams usually care about four things at once: charge throughput, integration simplicity, dock/cabinet fit, and fewer commissioning surprises. CP1500 lines up well here because the platform is already used in AGV charging module contexts, supports both LFP and NCM curves, and offers CAN plus remote control hooks. For most AGV charging cabinets, the discussion usually starts from industrial or ICT-adjacent safety logic rather than medical logic, so IEC/UL 62368-1 can be a useful component-level starting point. The engineering work that still matters is verifying pack match, BMS coordination, cable voltage drop, interlocks, fuse coordination, and service access.

Medical carts, medical racks, and battery-backed clinical systems

This is the scenario where teams most often confuse charger-level claims with system-level outcomes. If your end product is a medical cart or rack, the compliance conversation has to include intended-use environment, essential performance, alarm behavior, operator exposure, and pass/fail definitions during EMC stress. The upside is that a charger already positioned with Class B emissions and IEC 60601-1-2-oriented EMC language gives you a better base than starting with a generic industrial charger. The right move is to define what the system must continue doing during ESD, EFT, surge, radiated RF, and dips or interruptions, then build a repeatable pre-test around the final cable set and operating modes.

Industrial equipment and linear motor systems

In industrial equipment, the commercial win often comes from standardization. If one charger family can cover multiple voltage classes while holding mechanical size, AC input range, and controls architecture steady, you make panel design, spare strategy, documentation, and sourcing easier. That is where CP1500 becomes attractive for industrial battery systems and linear motor programs. Instead of redesigning around a different footprint at every voltage class, you can keep the mechanical and control integration logic far more stable and focus only on the pack mapping and the current requirement.

Why sourcing likes it

One family, multiple voltage classes, one compact envelope, and a clearer compliance narrative for RFQ comparison.

Why engineers like it

Built-in chemistry curves, CAN, remote sense, and predictable charger behavior reduce custom charger work.

Why compliance teams like it

Existing safety basis plus documented EMC intent reduces unknowns before lab booking.

A practical pre-compliance and testing workflow

The lowest-cost time to find a charger-integration problem is before you book formal testing, not after a failed round in the chamber. For CP1500-based projects, a practical workflow starts with classification and ends with a frozen evidence package. First, confirm the finished-product route: is the host system better evaluated under 62368-1, under a 60335 family path, or as a medical electrical system requiring 60601-1-2 EMC planning? Second, lock the real harness lengths, cable exits, grounding points, and enclosure configuration that will actually go to test. Third, run basic conducted and radiated emission pre-checks before the design disperses into field variants. Fourth, stress the system in modes that matter: charge start, full-load charging, battery disconnect or reconnection, communications active, alarms active, and any mission-critical operator state. Fifth, freeze the data package so the unit that goes to the lab matches the unit you intend to buy and ship.

This is also where many teams lose weeks by forgetting the “non-electrical” records that still affect compliance outcomes. Inspectors and labs care about repeatability: labels, nameplates, wire IDs, grounding evidence, cable routing photos, and a clean description of intended use. If you are building a control-panel-adjacent solution, panel discipline matters. If you are building a medical cart or mobile system, operator contact points, grounding, wheels, accessories, and host wiring discipline can all influence EMC behavior. The smartest move is to package compliance evidence in parallel with integration work instead of waiting for a QA scramble before shipment or test.

Flow diagram showing a five-step pre-compliance workflow: define the end use and standard, lock cables and grounding, run emissions pre-checks, apply ESD EFT and surge stress, and freeze the evidence package.
Generated workflow image: the repeatable pre-compliance sequence that reduces retests and argument loops before formal certification work.

Five checks to complete before you book the lab

  • Freeze the exact CP1500 model number and matching battery chemistry / series count.
  • Confirm final cable lengths, shield terminations, bonding points, and remote sense usage.
  • Define essential performance or mission-critical behavior for the full system, not just the charger.
  • Capture emissions and immunity observations in the same operating modes the lab will see.
  • Package labels, drawings, photos, FAT records, and configuration notes as part of the RFQ or test file.

How to select the right CP1500 model

For most buyers, model selection should not begin with nominal voltage alone. Start with chemistry, series count, and full-charge voltage, then check the current limit, host thermal budget, AC infrastructure, and communications needs. The good news is that the CP1500 family keeps the selection logic straightforward across seven common voltage classes. That makes it easier to standardize charger documentation while still fitting very different pack architectures. The table below is a practical starting point for RFQ conversations.

Model Voltage class Typical pack mapping Max charge current Direct product page
CP1500T24 24V-class 7S LFP / 6S NCM 62.5A View CP1500T24
CP1500T28 28V-class 8S LFP / 7S NCM 53.6A View CP1500T28
CP1500T36 36V-class 11S–12S LFP / 10S–11S NCM 41.2A View CP1500T36
CP1500T48 48V-class 15S–16S LFP / 13S–14S NCM 31.2A View CP1500T48
CP1500T60 60V-class 20S LFP / 17S NCM 25A View CP1500T60
CP1500T72 72V-class 24S LFP / 20S NCM 20.8A View CP1500T72
CP1500T100 100V-class 32S LFP / 27S NCM 10A View CP1500T100
Bar-style comparison chart of CP1500 voltage classes and maximum charge current for the 24V, 28V, 36V, 48V, 60V, 72V, and 100V family members.
Generated quick-select chart: current falls as voltage class rises, so choose by pack architecture and required charge time, not by wattage alone.

Start with three fast checks

  • Battery match: verify chemistry, series count, and full-charge voltage against the exact model.
  • System controls: confirm whether your architecture needs CAN, remote ON/OFF, or remote sense compensation.
  • Compliance route: identify whether your finished product is moving through 62368, 60335-family, or 60601-1-2-related system planning.

What to prepare before you send an RFQ

A better RFQ gets you a better technical response. If you want TPS ELECTRIC LLC to help you move faster, send the engineering context, not just a voltage label. Include the finished-product type, target market, compliance route, intended-use environment, battery chemistry, series count, required full-charge voltage, target charge time, maximum allowable current, expected harness length, whether remote sense will be used, whether CAN is required, and whether the product will sit inside a medical cart, a dock, a sealed industrial enclosure, or another host platform. That is the difference between a commodity quote and an integration-ready quote.

If your project is already in validation, add the records that usually slow down late-stage reviews: grounding or bonding notes, wiring drawings, label requirements, FAT expectations, and any specific EMC concerns such as ESD, surge, conducted emissions, or nearby RF sources. That lets commercial and technical teams speak the same language from the first reply. It also makes it easier to shortlist the correct CP1500 model page—whether that is CP1500T36, CP1500T48, or CP1500T72—without bouncing through preventable clarification cycles.

Best commercial outcome: pair your RFQ with the exact charger page and the intended compliance route. That allows TPS ELECTRIC LLC to answer on product fit, documentation scope, and risk points much earlier in the buying cycle.

FAQ

Does CP1500 meeting IEC 60601-1-2-related EMC language mean my medical cart automatically passes?

No. It means the charger starts from a stronger EMC basis for medical-adjacent integration. Your finished medical cart or ME system still needs a system-level test plan, intended-use environment definition, and pass/fail criteria for essential performance.

When should I think about 62368-1 instead of 60335-1?

Start with the finished product category. If the host product behaves more like ICT, communications, or control-rich connected equipment, 62368-1 is often the more natural discussion. If the product is sold or evaluated as a household or similar appliance, 60335-1 is often more relevant.

Can one CP1500 family really cover multiple lithium chemistries?

Yes, the family is presented with built-in LFP and NCM charge curves. You still need to verify series count, full-charge voltage, BMS compatibility, and allowable current before release.

Which CP1500 models are most common for AGV and industrial battery systems?

That depends on your pack architecture, but 24V-, 48V-, 60V-, and 72V-class selections are often where standard industrial and mobility battery programs start. Use the direct pages for CP1500T24, CP1500T48, CP1500T60, and CP1500T72 as the first shortlist.

What is the minimum information I should include in an RFQ?

Include end-product type, market, intended compliance route, chemistry, series count, full-charge voltage, current target, charge time expectation, AC source, enclosure or cart constraints, communications needs, and any test risks you already know about.

Power Design Guides for Small Industrial Panels: Solving Real Engineering Problems with TPS010-100W GP Series DIN Rail Power Supplies
Previous
Power Design Guides for Small Industrial Panels: Solving Real Engineering Problems with TPS010-100W GP Series DIN Rail Power Supplies
Read More
Industrial Applications of the AIMF480-B24: A 24V/20A DIN-Rail Power Supply for US Control Panels, Machine Skids, and Harsh-Environment 24VDC Systems
Next
Industrial Applications of the AIMF480-B24: A 24V/20A DIN-Rail Power Supply for US Control Panels, Machine Skids, and Harsh-Environment 24VDC Systems
Read More

Contact Us

Name*
Company Name*
Email*
Comment*
Get in Touch with TPS
Name*
Business Email*
Company Name
Country/Region
Inquiry Type*
Application / Industry
What problem are you facing right now?
What are you trying to achieve?
Target Timeline
Budget Range
We use Cookie to improve your online experience. By continuing browsing this website, we assume you agree our use of Cookie.