From a remote-controlled Hot Wheels car to a $400,000 robotic arm station, all electronics must be safe for those who handle them.
The difference between a child’s toy and an industrial process is that the latter is much more complex – and potentially risky.
For industrial-grade control panels, the UL508A certification standard serves as official proof that a manufacturer has made a safe, reliable product. It’s the gateway to your products passing inspection and maximizing operational uptime.
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UL, or Underwriters Laboratories, is an independent laboratory that sets product safety standards. UL collaborates with national and regional standards organizations worldwide. In the United States, UL is accredited by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) as a legit authority on product testing.
UL508A certification requires a manufacturer to design, build, and test to certain standards before releasing a final product. This means all individual materials and components in an industrial control panel must also prove to be safe and reliable.
UL508A standards cover industrial-use control panels operating at 1,000V or less. The ambient temperature must not exceed 104°F unless otherwise marked on the box.
Internally, the design must follow requirements for:
All electrical ratings and instructions must be directly on the panel for safe installation and use.
An OEM buyer doesn’t necessarily need certification itself, but it does need to use UL508A-certified manufacturers for any control panels it plans to use or sell. If your product needs to be manufactured to those standards, note this in the specs you send your supplier.
If you’re manufacturing the panels in-house, you’ll absolutely need to gain and maintain a UL508A certificate. You’ll also need certification if your outsourced part is going into a larger assembly or project that requires UL508A compliance.
Alternatively, you can skip the cost of obtaining the official certification, but manufacture your product to the same standards. If you take this route, be sure to hire a third party to audit and approve the product.
Sticking to globally recognized standards means you minimize the risk of approval, installation, or field use going awry.
Whether you manufacture in-house or outsource the work, make sure the team understands:
It’s almost always best to stick to U.S.-based sources for industrial panels and cabinets. Cheaper products from overseas may be poorly regulated and end up costing you more in maintenance and replacement anyway.
UL’s electrical control panel standards rely in part on the National Electric Code (NEC). UL requires documented proof that each panel meets applicable NEC requirements. Before releasing a product, a manufacturer must verify its panel includes proper safety measures:
On its end, UL puts each panel through its paces to ensure it works properly despite exposure to vibration, power level fluctuations, and extreme temperatures. UL tests industrial controls for:
Before a manufacturer earns the privilege to apply a UL mark on a product, it must complete mandatory training to understand the requirements.
Consider your launch date and supplier list (particularly when outsourcing the manufacturing) before starting any project that requires UL-certified panels. The lead time for UL508A certification depends on:
Plan accordingly so you don’t suffer unexpected delays. If you’re using a contractor for control panel manufacturing, verify up-front that it’s up to date on its certification.
If your control panel assembly doesn’t pass UL standards, the agency will send the manufacturer a report detailing each feature and test result that didn’t meet requirements. From there, it’s up to your design and engineering squads to modify the product according to UL508a control panel design guidelines. This points to another perk of working with a turnkey control panel manufacturer – it can recommend design improvements that’ll help the panels pass testing the first time.
Once you’ve confident the design now meets electrical control panel regulations, the manufacturer can schedule a retest. UL will ask for a description of the modifications along with samples of the redesigned panel.
Control panel certification is complex. There are so many agencies and acronyms flying around that we understand if you have more questions:
There’s no U.S. law requiring a supplier or OEM to hold UL certification.
However, that doesn’t absolve you from all responsibility. Electrical and commercial building codes, as well as retailers using those amenities, may require UL compliance for their order. And if avoiding the courtroom is your concern, remember: poorly tested and produced panels pose a massive safety risk. In the worst-case (but very realistic) scenario, you could face liability lawsuits.
Both UL508 and UL508A exist to ensure industrial control equipment is safe and reliable. The difference is that UL 508A is a subset of UL 508 specific to panels. An industrial panel manufacturer will need the 508A certification to be able to say it makes UL-compliant products.
The UL mark is a control panel’s shining stamp of approval – but that glow doesn’t necessarily cast a positive light on the entire operation.
For an enclosed industrial control panel, 508A certification covers the:
For an open-type industrial control panel, certification only covers the:
Equipment and loads connected to the panel – even if the panel manufacturer also made them – don’t get coverage.
Panels for use in hazardous environments locations must pass additional criteria. Their designs require industrial electrical enclosures and components that are extra-resistant to catastrophic failure.
The most common comparison engineers make when weighing requirements is UL698A vs. UL508A, but those aren’t the only standards you should consider:
There are differences between UL and IEC standards in terms of approach and application, so there’s no direct answer.
The closest matches are:
The world’s top industrial control manufacturers use UL508A to sell in not just the United States, but also dozens of other countries.
Third-party certification proves that the control panel designer put safety first – for installers, users, passers-by, and even the equipment itself. Certified electronic control assemblies don’t just protect people, they also protect your budget by reducing downtime and recalls.
If you still have UL design questions, or just want to expand your knowledge base about operational efficiency, visit our blog: