Define: EIA-310

What is EIA

EIA stands for the Electronic Industries Association. The current revision is EIA-310-D. The EIA-310 document is available for purchase at the IHS website.

Overview

EIA-310 is a specification for what is often called the “standard rack”. This specification standardizes several important features of 19″ racks, such as the Rack Unit (RU or U), vertical hole spacing, horizontal hole spacing, rack opening, and front panel width. The specification also set tolerances on each of these dimensions.

The EIA-310 specification has been the 19″ racks standard for equipment for 50 years. Despite this, RackSolutions believes that the items that the specification does not cover is the real reason for the industry wide incompatibility we now face. Rack features such as hole type, rack mounting depth, front and rear space, and obstructions between front and rear rails are the cause of real rack headaches.

Vertical Hole Spacing

Vertical hole spacing is defined as a repeating pattern of holes within one Rack Unit of 1.75″. The hole spacing alternated at: 1/2″ - 5/8″ - 5/8″ and repeats. The start and stop of the “U” space is in the middle of the 1/2″ spaced holes. See the diagram below.

Vertical Hole Spacing

Horizontal Spacing

The horizontal spacing of the vertical rows of holes is specified by EIA-310 at 18 5/16″ (18.312)(465.1 mm). This dimension is not well maintained on some racks, causing problems with equipment installation. Many manufacturers use equipment mounting slots instead of holes to allow for variations in this dimension.

Horizontal Spacing

Rack Opening

The opening in the rack is specified as a minimum of 17.72″ (450mm). 2Post or relay racks tend to have a larger than normal opening, as do many other racks with threaded holes. Square hole racks tend to be very close to the minimum opening.

Rack Opening

Front Panel Width

The only dimension on a 19″ rack that actually measures 19″ is the width of the front panel of equipment.

Front Panel Width

More Information

 

6 Responses to “Define: EIA-310”

  1. Raul Cortes Says:

    Horizontal Spacing. 465 mm = 18.307″.

    Regards!

  2. Bob Mimlitch Says:

    Yep. 18.312″ (18 5/16″) = 165,10448mm. I’m sure they rounded it off. However, the EIA-301 RevD states 465mm. The older EIA-301 RevC uses 18 5/16″ (18.312″), so you’re both right.

  3. Craig McCluskey Says:

    http://electronics.ihs.com/collections/abstracts/eia-310.htm says,

    Section 1
    Description: This section is the soft metric conversion of the superseded EIA-310-C to
    conform with U.S. Public Law 100-418.

    I’m sure this means rounding off.

    It also says,

    Section 2
    Description: This section is an adaptation of IEC 917 recommendations for Cabinets,
    Racks and Panels. It is compatible with the IEC 25 millimeter practices….

    Whatever 25 millimeter practices are. Is that different than 25.4 mm = 1 inch?

    Craig

  4. Joseph B. Mattheeussen Says:

    Actually, the ‘correct’ mm to inch Conversion Standard is the inverse of .03937″ (=’s 1mm)… Therefore the EXACT inverse is actually: 25.400050800101600203200406400813, or 25.40005 for short!!! Multiply any ‘inch’ number by the Conversion factor of 25.40005 and you get the mm equivalent, and the opposite goes by dividing the ‘X’mm number by the Conversion factor to get the actual inch equivalent… -Can you tell I’m a Design Eng’r?!

  5. J Edelson Says:

    Not quite:

    As _currently_ defined, the inch is 2.54 cm _exactly_.

    When the US congress adopted the meter as the standard of measure (in the mid 1800’s), it also adopted the standard that a yard was exactly 3600/3937 of a meter, which made the meter 39.37″ and the mm 0.03937″ as Joseph states.

    However in the mid 1900’s the inch was _redefined_ to be 2.54 cm.

    This leads to there being two different definitions of the foot in common use. The ’survey foot’ uses the old definition.

  6. Alwyn Castelino Says:

    when US congress adapted they didnt clealy seen mfg facility available around the globe! so nobody belives in US standards as practice for more sophiticated work we can adapt 25.400050800101600203200406400813mm=1″
    but as we go do the enclosure or any panel work there its difficult to maintain the acuracy

    cheeerz

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