A common belief posted on this forum and others is that the FCC Enforcement Bureau only takes action when unlicensed FM stations use "a lot" of power, such as 10 watts or more. But a recent action was taken against an operator for having a measured field strength of ~17 mV/m at a distance of ~227 meters from the transmit site.
That field strength at that distance seemed low for a power of 10 watts or more, so calculations were done to try to get some idea of what the radiated power actually was.
The radiated power needed from a typical transmit antenna height was something in the vicinity of 300 milliwatts (see below).
Radiated Power > Tx Ant Height > Path Distance > Field Strength
300 mW > 10 meters > 227 meters > 16.95 mV/m
(Free space equation was used.)
It doesn't take much radiated power to generate a considerable amount of field strength at close distances.
This information is provided not to "bash" Part 15 FM operators, but to give some reality-based information that should be useful to them.
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That field strength at that distance seemed low for a power of 10 watts or more, so calculations were done to try to get some idea of what the radiated power actually was.
The radiated power needed from a typical transmit antenna height was something in the vicinity of 300 milliwatts (see below).
Radiated Power > Tx Ant Height > Path Distance > Field Strength
300 mW > 10 meters > 227 meters > 16.95 mV/m
(Free space equation was used.)
It doesn't take much radiated power to generate a considerable amount of field strength at close distances.
This information is provided not to "bash" Part 15 FM operators, but to give some reality-based information that should be useful to them.
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