Re: The FCC is pragmatic
> Keith, having federal government employees in my family, I
> know that agencies often adopt rules that are designed to
> make their job of enforcement easier (they have a built-in
> "fudge factor," so to speak).
>
> The FCC Part 15.219 rules (which can be used instead of the
> Part 15.209 rules if desired) are a perfect example of this.
> The FCC is willing to accept that a
> transmitter/antenna/ground system built to comply with Part
> 15.219 will somewhat exceed the field strength specified in
> Part 15.209 because enforcement is much easier.
>
> An FCC field agent needs no test equipment to determine
> compliance with Part 15.219, as it can be done by visual
> inspection of the installation. The transmitter should have
> an FCC certification (or type acceptance) label, the antenna
> should be the one specified by the transmitter manufacturer
> (a 2.59 meter [102"] CB whip used for outdoor installations
> with all currently-available transmitters and ATUs) or the
> manufacturer-provided 3 meter wire antenna for indoor use
> (Talking House and TalkingSign).
>
> Determination of the compliance of the ground lead and
> ground portion is up to the field agent's discretion. A 1/4
> wavelength or comparable-length ground wire connected to
> nothing at the far end (an intentionally radiating
> counterpoise) is prohibited, but a transmitter grounded to a
> metal mast or tower, or with a ground wire running straight
> down to a ground rod (so long as the ground wire is a small
> fraction of a wavelength long) is permitted because of the
> requirement for DC safety grounding of the transmitter.
> Some field agents want a Metal Oxide Varistor (MOV)
> lightning arrestor at the transmitter or ATU ground terminal
> (so that there is no DC continuity with the ground wire,
> mast, or tower except during a direct or nearby lightning
> strike), while others don't require them. -- JasonW
>
Hi Jason and others,
Your post is interesting, but may I suggest, for now, that we leave the FCC and the rules out of the discussion?
I would like to see some real measured field strength data for part 15 AM systems and I would like to compare these to the predictions made by engineering calculations. The reason for this is so we can gain confidence in the models and calculations and predict results before spending the time and trouble building things. I have seen on this board calculated field strengths but I have not seen measured field strengths. If I missed it, please advise.
I cannot make accurate field strength measurements, but if someone on this board can or did, it would be beneficial to share this with us.
You may quote me: "With the data you do not have, I will establish what you do not know.".
Neil