If your electronics behave perfectly on a clean bench supply but reset, latch, or die in the real vehicle environment, you’re missing the conducted transient reality. ISO 7637-2 is a bench test standard for conducted transients on 12 V and 24 V road-vehicle electrical systems, with defined procedures for injection and measurement. The goal is simple: prove your device stays compatible when the supply line gets hit by real-world transient events.
ISO 7637-2 is a conducted-transient bench test standard for 12 V and 24 V road vehicles. It defines procedures for injecting and measuring supply-line transients so suppliers and OEMs can validate compatibility in a repeatable way. :contentReference[oaicite:13]{index=13}
What it is not: a complete “vehicle EMC” program by itself, and not a substitute for system-level validation. ISO 16750-2, for example, focuses on electrical loads and explicitly states EMC is not covered by that document. :contentReference[oaicite:14]{index=14} Your bench plan needs both: transient immunity discipline plus realistic power distribution and harness constraints.
Most teams don’t fail ISO 7637-2 because they “forgot a TVS.” They fail because they didn’t map the failure signature to the coupling path: negative transients drive dropout/reset behavior, positive transients drive clamp/OV behavior, and fast transients expose weak decoupling and reference control.
ISO 7637-2 includes defined pulse families (commonly referenced as 1, 2a, 2b, 3a, 3b) and provides example severity levels for 12 V and 24 V systems in its annexes. :contentReference[oaicite:15]{index=15} Your exact pulse levels and performance criteria should match the OEM spec and the agreed functional status classification, not “whatever the generator can do.” :contentReference[oaicite:16]{index=16}
If you learned “load dump = ISO 7637-2” years ago, here’s the update: ISO 7637-2 removed test pulses 4 and 5 (including load dump variants) in its 2011 edition because they are specified in ISO 16750-2. :contentReference[oaicite:17]{index=17} Vishay’s EDN technical note describes the same industry shift: load dump testing historically lived under ISO 7637-2, then moved to ISO 16750-2. :contentReference[oaicite:18]{index=18}
Practically: your protection strategy has to handle both “fast, lower-energy” transients and “slower, higher-energy” load events, and your bench must be configured so you aren’t accidentally softening (or amplifying) the event with fixture impedance.
The fastest way to get misleading results is treating your bench like an ideal voltage source. ISO 16750-2 makes the key point: electrical loads can vary due to the electrical impedance (resistance and inductance) in the vehicle wiring harness and connection system. :contentReference[oaicite:19]{index=19} That same reality changes transient waveforms at the DUT terminals.
For EOL benches and vehicle-like rigs, control these variables:
The “right” protection depends on what fails. Use this section like a design notebook for test benches: identify the failure signature, then choose a protection pattern that fixes the mechanism (not just the symptom).
If your failure is “reset only,” don’t start with a giant clamp at the front. First prove whether the local rails are dipping (dropout) or whether fast coupling is triggering logic. For cabinet/rack teams, grounding and bonding mistakes create identical “mystery resets” patterns—use this checklist as a fast sanity check: grounding and bonding failure modes.
A common failure mode is “fixing” a transient by adding a clamp that causes new issues: thermal overstress during repeated events, nuisance shutdown, or unacceptable voltage drop. Analog Devices’ design note on simulating ISO 7637-2 and ISO 16750-2 transients emphasizes using simulation early to pinpoint issues that otherwise appear during EMC testing. :contentReference[oaicite:20]{index=20} The point: validate protection choices across operating modes, not just one pulse shape.
| What you see on the bench | Likely cause | First fix to try | Common time-wasters |
|---|---|---|---|
| DC-DC resets or undervoltage latch on negative events | input dips below UV threshold; reverse/negative stress path | verify terminal voltage at DUT; add series impedance + local hold-up; ensure reverse/negative protection is sized for the event | only increasing “front-end clamp” without solving local rail dip |
| OV trip, clamp heating, or fuse events on positive transients | energy handled by clamp is too high or poorly placed | move/coordinate clamp near entry; check thermal/energy ratings; validate source/harness impedance assumptions | adding multiple clamps in parallel without coordination |
| Logic upset, watchdog resets on fast transients | fast coupling into local rails or references | tighten local decoupling, reduce loop area, improve reference strategy; re-test with identical harness geometry | oversizing TVS at entry expecting it to fix local coupling |
| Passes one day, fails the next | bench setup variability (harness impedance/placement) | freeze harness length/routing; document measurement point at DUT terminals; baseline the source | changing multiple variables between retests |
If your bench includes DIN-rail power conversion in supporting fixtures or racks, treat wiring and mounting as part of transient behavior too. Hardware context: DIN-rail power supplies. For compliance-focused examples, see safety & compliance cases.
ISO 7637-2 specifies bench test methods and procedures for conducted transient compatibility of equipment installed on passenger cars and commercial vehicles fitted with 12 V or 24 V electrical systems. :contentReference[oaicite:22]{index=22}
ISO 7637-2 (2011 edition) removed certain pulses (including load dump variants) because they are specified in ISO 16750-2. :contentReference[oaicite:23]{index=23} Industry notes describe the same transition from older ISO 7637-2 load dump definitions to ISO 16750-2. :contentReference[oaicite:24]{index=24}
Because the harness resistance and inductance change the voltage seen at the DUT terminals and how energy is delivered during an event. ISO 16750-2 explicitly notes electrical loads can vary due to electrical impedance in the vehicle wiring harness and connection system. :contentReference[oaicite:25]{index=25}
Authoritative references (external):
KFS1200 AC/DC Power Supply: How to Select the Right 1200W 48V-200V Model for Industrial and Medical Equipment
Industrial Applications of the eTM1003, eTM1003F, and eTM1003P Series: How to Select a 100V/3A 300W DC Power Supply for Test Benches, Repair Stations, and OEM Integration
ONV-H3064PS & ONV-H3108PS Compliance and Testing Guide: EN 62368-1, FCC Part 15 Class B, and RoHS for CCTV, AP, VoIP, and Access Control Projects
How to Select the Right 150V 2A 300W Bench DC Power Supply for Test, Validation, and RFQ Approval: eTM1502 Series Guide
TDM570T15-12KIRF: 12kW 570VDC-to-15V-Class Bidirectional DC-DC Power Module for Cell Formation and Energy-Recycling Systems
TBM750-53KTIF Bidirectional Power Module: 53kW Three-Phase 750V AC/DC Conversion for Cabinet Integration and High-Voltage DC Bus Projects
eTM1502 Series Industrial Applications: How to Choose the Right 150V 2A 300W DC Power Supply for Bench Validation, Burn-In, and Automated Test Stations
Compliance & Testing for ONV-H3016 and ONV-H3024: Using EN 62368-1, FCC Part 15 Class B, and RoHS to Reduce Procurement Risk
Power Design Guide: Choosing the Right eTM1003 Series 100V / 3A / 300W DC Bench Power Supply for High-Voltage Test Benches
eTM1520 Series: Which 15V 20A 300W DC Power Supply Fits Your Bench, Fixture, or RFQ?