Compaq 5500 manual Environmental Requirements, Flame Retardants, Cadmium

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TCO‘99 Requirements

The energy requirements include a demand that the computer and/or display, after a certain period of inactivity, shall reduce its power consumption to a lower level in one or more stages. The length of time to reactivate the computer shall be reasonable for the user.

Labelled products must meet strict environmental demands, for example, in respect of the reduction of electric and magnetic fields, physical and visual ergonomics and good usability.

Below you will find a brief summary of the environmental requirements met by this product. The complete environmental criteria document may be ordered from:

TCO Development

SE-114 94 Stockholm, Sweden

Fax: +46 8 782 92 07

Email (Internet): development@tco.se

Current information regarding TCO'99 approved and labelled products may also be obtained via the Internet, using the address: http://www.tco-info.com

Environmental Requirements

Flame Retardants

Flame retardants are present in printed circuit boards, cables, wires, casings and housings. Their purpose is to prevent, or at least to delay the spread of fire. Up to 30% of the plastic in a computer casing can consist of flame retardant substances. Most flame retardants contain bromine or chloride, and those flame retardants are chemically related to another group of environmental toxins, PCBs. Both the flame retardants containing bromine or chloride and the PCBs are suspected of giving rise to severe health effects, including reproductive damage in fish-eating birds and mammals, due to the bioaccumulative processes. Flame retardants have been found in human blood and researchers fear that disturbances in foetus development may occur.

The relevant TCO'99 demand requires that plastic components weighing more than 25 grams must not contain flame retardants with organically bound bromine or chlorine. Flame retardants are allowed in the printed circuit boards since no substitutes are available.

Bioaccumulativeorganisms. is defined as substances which accumulate within living

Cadmium

Cadmium is present in rechargeable batteries and in the color-generating layers of certain computer displays. Cadmium damages the nervous system and is toxic in high doses. The relevant TCO'99 requirement states that batteries, the color-generating layers of display screens and the electrical or electronics components must not contain any cadmium.

Cadmium is a heavy metal that is Bioaccumulative.

D–2

Reference Guide

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Contents Reference Guide Reference Guide First Edition January Document Part Number Contents Agency Regulatory Notices Introduction Kit ContentsPower Requirements Safety and Maintenance GuidelinesSafety Guidelines Maintenance GuidelinesSafety and Maintenance Guidelines Removing the Monitor Base Monitor Base Installation InstallationMonitor Installation Speaker Installation Attaching the Speakers to the Monitor Speaker Security Lock Front Panel Controls OperationInformation Files Front Panel Controls On-Screen DisplayOn-Screen Display Icons and Functions On-Screen Display FunctionsOn-Screen Display Icons and Functions Out of Frequency Range Message No Signal MessageMonitor Messages Power Management Status for 9500/19 Series Monitors MV, S Using the Energy Saver ModeReference Guide Solving Common Problems TroubleshootingSelect the Speaker icon on Preparing to Call Technical Support Using the World Wide Web5500 CV, MV, S Technical SpecificationsCompaq 5500/15 Series Monitor Technical Specifications 7500 CV, MV, S Compaq 7500/17 Series Monitor7550 FS Compaq 7550/17 Flat CRT MonitorTCO’99 Some models meet TCO’99 9500 MV, S Compaq 9500/19 Series Monitor9500 MV, S Cables Agency Regulatory NoticesFederal Communications Commission Notice ModificationsEPA Energy Star Compliance Power Cord Set RequirementsCanadian Notice European Union NoticeReference Guide TCO‘99 Requirements Why do we have environmentally labelled computers?Cadmium Environmental RequirementsFlame Retardants Lead MercuryCFCs Freons