TRADUguide

TRADUguide - Your Guide to Translators and Translation Agencies

For translators

Find a job  |   Conges terminology center  |   Agencies list  |   Feedback forum
Register as a freelance translator or an agency  |   My profile  |   My status
Become a featured member  |   Renew your featured membership

For job posters

Post a translation job to ask for quotes
Browse the translators directory
My account / My job postings

Home   |   This is how TRADUguide works   |   Contacts / Imprint

 

TRADUguide.com auf Deutsch

Conges terminology question

<<Previous question

All questions

Next question>>

3 months ago

PRASANN HARANKHEDKAR  See profile asked this question:

Language pair:

German > English

Subject:

Technical / Engineering

Level of diffculty:

Easy / medium

Word or term in question:

HV-AC-Ersatzlast in Schirmbox

Context:

While translating a VW Standard of EMV von Kfz-Elektronikbauteilen, I got stuck with the word Schirmbox

Keywords:

EMC Standard of VW Group

 

 

Important If you feel that you can answer the above terminology question, you are invited to enter your answer.

(Login required)

(Asker only)

Answers on this question

3 months ago

Joachim Kehr  See my profile wrote:

screen box

My comment:

as a space engineer, I would call that "screen box".
It should screen or shield everything.

Click here to comment on this answer (login required)

(Asker only)

3 months ago

CMD  See my profile wrote:

HC-AC-dummy load in shielded box / High Current AC Dummy Load in a Shielded Box

My comment:

shielded box=> It "encloses" the load and protects it from external influences (e.g. electromagnetic interference).

Schirm => abschirmen e.g. to shield from, screen against,protect from [Schirmraum e.g. shielded enclosure => shttps://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/engineering/shielded-enclosure]

Cf Siemens Dictionary of Power Engineering and Automation

My references:

here: a specialized device for testing electrical power systems by simulating loads and absorbing generated power; the shielded box prevents EMI (electromagnetic interference) generated by high power affecting sensitive electronic devices in the (direct) vicinity

Click here to comment on this answer (login required)

Comments by other colleagues on this answer:

3 months ago

CMD  See profile wrote:

SORRY, SORRY - TYPOS !!! HV = High Voltage HV-AC-dummy load in shielded box / High Voltage AC Dummy Load in a Shielded Box

(Asker only)

3 months ago

Charles Warcup  See my profile wrote:

Shielded Box or RF Shielding Enclosure

My comment:

Not my answer, but Google Gemini seems quite clear:
The German word **Schirmbox** has two primary meanings depending on the context:

### 1. In Electronics and RF Testing (The most common usage):

* **German Meaning:** In this technical context, "Schirm" means "shield" or "screen," and "Box" means "box."
* **English Translation:** **Shielded Box** or **RF Shielding Enclosure.**
* **What it is:** This is a specialized metal container used to isolate electronic devices from external radio frequency (RF) signals and electromagnetic interference (EMI) during testing. It creates a controlled environment (a mini-Faraday cage) for tasks like measuring wireless device performance (e.g., mobile phones, Wi-Fi modules) without interference.

### 2. In Photography and Studio Lighting:

* **German Meaning:** In this context, "Schirm" means "umbrella," and "Box" refers to a container or housing.
* **English Translation:** **Softbox** or **Umbrella Softbox.**
* **What it is:** A softbox is a common light modifier used in photography and filmmaking. It is a box-like enclosure, often with a silvered interior and a translucent front diffuser, that fits over a light source. Its function is to create a large, soft, and even light, similar to the quality of an overcast sky. This term is sometimes used interchangeably with "softbox," but an "umbrella softbox" specifically refers to one built on an umbrella frame.

My references:

Query to Google Gemini with the following prompt:
What is a Schirmbox and what is it in English?

Click here to comment on this answer (login required)

(Asker only)