OEM buyers often compare surge protective devices from IEC-style and UL-style markets. One datasheet may use Uc, while another may use MCOV. This guide explains how to align the wording on SPD labels, datasheets, packaging and test files before private label production.
Quick answer: Uc and MCOV serve a similar technical role, but they are not label-interchangeable marketing words. IEC-style SPD documents commonly use Uc. UL 1449-style documents commonly use MCOV. For OEM orders, the label wording should match the target market, datasheet, packaging, test file and certification evidence.
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Quick Answer for OEM Buyers
If your customer is from an IEC-style market, the SPD datasheet and product label will usually show Uc. If your customer is from a UL 1449-style market, the technical documents often use MCOV.
The purpose is similar: both help confirm the maximum continuous voltage condition for the SPD. But the wording should not be changed casually. In an OEM order, the wording must match the target market and the evidence file behind the product.
Simple rule: before printing OEM SPD labels, confirm the target market, required standard, voltage wording, datasheet format, product marking, packaging language and certification claim together.
What Uc and MCOV Mean in SPD Documentation
Uc means maximum continuous operating voltage in IEC-style SPD documentation. It is the maximum voltage that can be continuously applied to the SPD under normal service conditions.
MCOV also means maximum continuous operating voltage in UL-style SPD documents. Buyers often see MCOV in North America-oriented product files, labels or technical catalogues.
For purchasing teams, the important point is not only the definition. The important point is whether the label, datasheet, test evidence and customer approval document are using the same terminology correctly.
Professional note: Uc and MCOV have a similar role, but they should not be treated as casual translation equivalents. The wording should follow the applicable standard, product approval route and target market.
IEC-Style vs UL 1449-Style Wording
OEM SPD buyers often source from one country and sell into another market. This is why voltage terminology becomes a documentation issue, not only a technical issue.
| Document style | Common wording | Where buyers see it | What OEM buyers should confirm |
|---|---|---|---|
| IEC-style documents | Uc | Datasheet, technical catalogue, product marking, instruction sheet. | Confirm that the Uc value matches the approved product file and the target project requirement. |
| UL 1449-style documents | MCOV | North America-oriented datasheet, product marking, approval-related documents. | Confirm MCOV wording, actual certification status and whether the product is allowed to carry the requested claim. |
| GB/T 18802.1-style or local IEC-based documents | Uc | Local technical files, catalogue pages, project documents and supplier datasheets. | Confirm whether local wording follows IEC-style documentation or a project-specific requirement. |
| Mixed export OEM orders | Uc / MCOV | Private label artwork, packaging, datasheet, model code and customer approval files. | Confirm one consistent documentation route before printing labels or mass-producing packaging. |
Where Uc or MCOV Appears in an OEM SPD Order
In private label SPD orders, voltage wording appears in more places than many buyers expect. If one file is changed but another file is not updated, the order can become inconsistent.
The printed label should show the correct Uc or MCOV wording, voltage rating, type, model number and safety markings.
The datasheet should use the same voltage term and rating as the product label and quotation.
Box labels, cartons and user-facing packaging should not claim a different rating or standard from the product file.
Wiring diagrams, installation notes and safety warnings should match the SPD type and voltage documentation.
Test reports and approval evidence should support the rating and wording used in the commercial documents.
If the model name includes a voltage value, it should not conflict with the datasheet and product marking.
Why Labels, Datasheets and Files Must Match
OEM SPD orders are not only judged by the product sample. Buyers, distributors, panel builders and project engineers also check the documentation around the product.
If the label says one voltage term, the datasheet says another, and the packaging makes a certification claim that the test file does not support, the buyer may lose trust even if the product itself is suitable.
| Mismatch | Why it creates risk | Better practice |
|---|---|---|
| Label shows MCOV, datasheet shows Uc only | The customer may think the product follows a UL-style documentation route. | Confirm whether MCOV wording is supported before using it on the label. |
| Model code includes one voltage, datasheet lists another | Sales, warehouse and after-sales teams may identify the wrong product. | Align model code, rating table and label artwork before production. |
| Packaging claims a standard not supported by evidence | This can create approval, customs or customer audit problems. | Separate technical wording from certification claims and check the evidence file. |
| Different documents use different voltage terms | Panel builders and project engineers may question whether the product file is controlled. | Use one approved documentation route for each target market. |
Does MCOV Wording Mean the SPD Is UL Listed?
No. MCOV is a technical wording commonly seen in UL 1449-style SPD documents, but writing MCOV on a label does not automatically mean the product is UL listed, UL recognized or approved for a specific market.
Certification status should be confirmed separately from the wording used on the label or datasheet. A product can use a similar voltage concept in technical discussion, but certification claims require real supporting evidence.
Important: do not print UL-related claims, marks or wording unless the approval route and documentation support them. For OEM orders, confirm certification status before label artwork and packaging are finalized.
What to Confirm Before Printing OEM SPD Labels
Before mass production, OEM buyers should freeze the technical wording and document set. This prevents late-stage changes after labels, cartons and datasheets have already been printed.
- Target market: IEC-style, UL 1449-style, GB/T 18802.1-style, or local project requirement.
- Correct voltage term: Uc, MCOV, or both only when supported by the documentation route.
- Voltage rating shown on the product label and datasheet.
- SPD type, pole structure, protection mode and wiring diagram.
- Model code, logo, brand name and private label artwork.
- Datasheet language, rating table and product description.
- Packaging text, carton label and instruction sheet.
- Test report, certification evidence and any approval claim.
- Sales quotation and customer approval file.
Send us your target market, label draft, datasheet requirement and packaging plan. We can help review whether Uc, MCOV, voltage rating and documentation wording are aligned before production.
Check OEM Label and Datasheet ConsistencyCommon OEM Documentation Mistakes
Mistake 1: Treating Uc and MCOV as simple translation words
They have a similar technical role, but the label wording should follow the target market and evidence file. Do not replace Uc with MCOV only because a customer asks for a North America-style datasheet.
Mistake 2: Printing labels before the datasheet is approved
Labels, datasheets and cartons should be approved together. If labels are printed first, any later technical change may create waste or inconsistent documentation.
Mistake 3: Using MCOV wording to imply certification
MCOV wording does not prove UL listing. Certification claims must be supported by the relevant approval file and allowed marking.
Mistake 4: Using one datasheet for all markets
Different markets may require different wording, language, rating presentation and approval references. A single generic datasheet may not be suitable for every OEM customer.
Mistake 5: Forgetting the model code
If the model code includes a voltage value, it should be checked against the label, datasheet and packaging. Otherwise the same product may appear as different ratings in different documents.
FAQ: SPD Uc vs MCOV for OEM Labels and Datasheets
Is Uc the same as MCOV in an SPD datasheet?
Uc and MCOV serve a similar selection role because both relate to the maximum continuous voltage that an SPD can withstand. However, they belong to different documentation habits and approval systems, so OEM labels and datasheets should not replace one term with the other casually.
Should an OEM SPD label show Uc or MCOV?
It depends on the target market and the documentation route. IEC-style markets commonly use Uc, while UL 1449-style documents commonly use MCOV. The product label, datasheet, packaging and technical file should follow the same wording and evidence.
Does MCOV wording mean the SPD is UL listed?
No. Showing MCOV wording does not mean the SPD is automatically UL listed or UL approved. Certification status must be confirmed separately through the official listing, approval document or test file.
Can one OEM SPD datasheet show both Uc and MCOV?
It may be possible only when the supplier has a clear documentation strategy and the ratings are supported by the product design and evidence file. Buyers should avoid adding both terms simply for marketing, especially when the approval route is not confirmed.
What should match before printing an OEM SPD label?
The product label should match the datasheet, model code, packaging, instruction sheet, test report, certification claim and sales quotation. Any mismatch can create confusion during customs clearance, project approval or after-sales support.
Can I translate Uc into MCOV for a private label SPD?
Do not translate Uc into MCOV without checking the target market, applicable standard, product file and supplier confirmation. The two terms have a similar function, but the label wording must match the documentation and market requirement.
What information should OEM buyers send before confirming Uc or MCOV wording?
Send the target market, required standard or certification, expected label format, datasheet template, model code plan, packaging language, voltage rating requirement and any customer approval document.
Related SPD Uc / MCOV Guides
This article is part of our SPD Uc and MCOV guide series. Use the guides below to compare cross-market terminology, voltage selection, calculation logic, common ratings, and country-related power system differences.
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SPD Uc and MCOV Selection Across IEC, UL and Export Markets
A full overview of why Uc and MCOV ratings vary across IEC-style, UL-style, GB/T-style and export markets. -
SPD Uc Selection Guide for Distribution Boards and OEM Orders
A practical guide for choosing 275V, 320V, 385V or 440V AC SPD options for panels and OEM orders. -
SPD Uc Calculation for TN, TT, IT and Split-Phase Systems
A calculation-focused guide for checking SPD Uc against earthing systems, connection modes and system voltage. -
Common SPD Uc and MCOV Ratings: 150V, 275V, 320V, 385V, 440V and 480V
A catalogue-style explanation of common Uc and MCOV rating values and where buyers often see them. -
Why SPD Uc and MCOV Ratings Vary by Country and Power System
A market-focused guide explaining why common SPD voltage ratings differ between regions, grid systems and project requirements.
