In recent years, the automotive field has witnessed tremendous changes. The advent of advances in electronics hardware components like motors, BMS, display clusters, braking control units, motor control units, and so on has made product development that much harder to undertake. As the complexity increased, pre-compliance testing at the design stage has become one of the major success factors.
Early-stage testing brings benefits spanning acceleration to market time and minimized compliance costs. Hardware product manufacturers practicing testing in the development phase are those who comply with international and also Indian regulatory standards like AIS 004 (India), ISO 26262, ISO 7637, CISPR 25, and UN ECE R10, thus avoiding expensive rear-ends caused by late-stage failures.
Pre-compliance testing is the testing of a hardware product to determine whether the product meets a set of regulatory standards at an early design stage, prior to submission for official certification. It covers electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) testing, electrical safety testing, thermal and mechanical validation, and functional performance in the real world.
This is especially important for components such as:
All should get their marks on these EMC, electrical safety, and automotive functional safety standards before going on sale.
The steps are as follows:
If compliance issues arise late in the design process, full redesigns could ensue, delaying launches. Costs can lead to increased expenditures. Testing in pre-compliance can identify potential design flaws earlier, thereby limiting reworks.
We also help with design failure analyses; along with compliance testing, it identifies issues actively so you can refine your design variably with expected performance.
Finding issues early on means they get resolved faster, so products get to market sooner. Time-sensitive product launches capture a huge competitive advantage, particularly in automotive electronics.
In India, there is AIS 004 for EMC compliance and environmental testing for automotive electronic components. Globally, manufacturers have AIMs to comply too, such as:
Pre-compliance testing ensures your components- whether a battery pack, an ECU, or a motor controller-complies with domestic and international automotive regulations, so you have an easier way into the global market.
As vehicles become smart and electrified, increasing the number of hardware modules that fall under regulatory scrutiny, the software modules include:
And thermal performance tests, EMC and EMI behaviour, voltage and current protection, and electrical surge immunity must be performed on each of these.
We provided design-failure analyses and compliance testing so that product teams can obtain feedback to avoid late-stage bottlenecks.
Many manufacturers consider compliance to be a last step in product building. Such a reactive approach possibly impedes hardware innovation and profitability. It is pertinent that pre-compliance testing be a part of the hardware development lifecycle.
Early testing may cover anything from the validation of motor control units against voltage transients to making sure display clusters are immune to EMI, thereby ensuring compliance and high-grade performance in the product right from the start.
Due to global regulatory constraints and the demand for advanced electronics arising from EVs, investing in pre-compliance testing during the design phase now cannot be treated as an option. It spells cabinet for long-term success.
Pre-compliance testing improves your compliance readiness, ensures design integrity so that products such as battery systems, ECUs, and powertrain electronics remain reliable in real automotive environments, and acts almost as a speedway to enter the market.
We also assist in design-failure analysis along with compliance testing: a one-stop solution for automotive hardware product manufacturers intent on innovation without compromise.