Here is the FCC notice sent to B&H Photo in New York City regarding the sale of illegal and non-type accepted FM transmitters in the US: the fine is up to $22,000 a day per apparatus being sold, and they list 6 unaccepted devices.
It's stupid that they got busted for transmitters from reputable brands like Rolls and Scosche which comply with the Part 15 field strength limit but broke the rules in minor ways, such as having a removable antenna connector or being able to transmit on 87.9 MHz (Part 15 strictly only allows 88.0 to 108.0 MHz), while Amazon and eBay are full of no-name Chinese FM transmitters which grossly exceed the Part 15 field strength limit, with output power as high as 20 watts.
For example, this 7 watt FM transmitter with 76-108 MHz coverage, available for $69 on Amazon, sold and shipped by them:
Here's the rule. Operation on 87.5-87.9 MHz are a no-no, because operation in the TV bands is a no-no.§ 15.239 Operation in the band 88-108 MHz.
(a) Emissions from the intentional radiator shall be confined within a band 200 kHz wide centered on the operating frequency. The 200 kHz band shall lie wholly within the frequency range of 88-108 MHz
(b) The field strength of any emissions within the permitted 200 kHz band shall not exceed 250 microvolts/meter at 3 meters. The emission limit in this paragraph is based on measurement instrumentation employing an average detector. The provisions in § 15.35 for limiting peak emissions apply.
(c) The field strength of any emissions radiated on any frequency outside of the specified 200 kHz band shall not exceed the general radiated emission limits in § 15.209.
This is symptomatic of a situation that governments often find themselves engaging in: shooting the messenger instead of the villain.Also I've never seen anything made by Rolls, but Scosche is a major brand that is sold in a lot of major stores, so if there is a problem the FCC should be going after the manufacturers, not the stores that sell them.
The FCC doesn't have either the staff or the political will to go after Part 15 devices, unless somebody complains about interference. As long as nobody complains and/or the range of the transmitter is kept to 200 feet or less (per OET 63, which is not codified in Part 15, but is what the FCC goes by), they aren't going to do squat. Especially when used in church parking lots, which was rather common during COVID.The FCC should be attacking the importers of those transmitters, not the retailers. Again, shooting the messenger.
What's ironic here is that "Kevtronics" sounds like the brand of one of these units! 🤪It's stupid that they got busted for transmitters from reputable brands like Rolls and Scosche which comply with the Part 15 field strength limit but broke the rules in minor ways, such as having a removable antenna connector or being able to transmit on 87.9 MHz (Part 15 strictly only allows 88.0 to 108.0 MHz), while Amazon and eBay are full of no-name Chinese FM transmitters which grossly exceed the Part 15 field strength limit, with output power as high as 20 watts.
For example, this 7 watt FM transmitter with 76-108 MHz coverage, available for $69 on Amazon, sold and shipped by them:
You bring up an excellent point about the FCC: they have limited criminal proprietorial authority. As we see with pirates, they can visit illegal stations and impose a fine, but they really can't impose a meaningful sanction like a nifty prison term.The FCC doesn't have either the staff or the political will to go after Part 15 devices, unless somebody complains about interference. As long as nobody complains and/or the range of the transmitter is kept to 200 feet or less (per OET 63, which is not codified in Part 15, but is what the FCC goes by), they aren't going to do squat. Especially when used in church parking lots, which was rather common during COVID.
Very true. They are not part of the criminal justice system. It's up to the Justice Dept to file charges and prosecute users, importers, and sellers of illegal/unauthorized radio equipment. Not likely to happen in any of those cases. It's just not that big a deal.You bring up an excellent point about the FCC: they have limited criminal proprietorial authority. As we see with pirates, they can visit illegal stations and impose a fine, but they really can't impose a meaningful sanction like a nifty prison term.
But Big Pharma heavily pushed those narcotics on the doctors in the first place, including literally wining and dining them to get them to prescribe more narcotic painkillers to their patients. And then pharmacies turned a blind eye to patients who they could tell were doctor-shopping to get more prescriptions to feed their addiction.We have a recent case of the Feds penalizing pharmaceutical companies for prescription narcotics, when the people who cause the problem are the over-prescribing doctors who should be prosecuted and penalized with a loss of their license to practice. (I'm no fan of some of the things Big Pharma does... my monthly "main" prescription has a co-pay of $1,300!)
Just a guess, but maybe in this case the FCC was following up on a specific consumer complaint that was made about the items B&H was selling, but since they didn't receive any such complaints about the other stores you mention, they didn't bother checking?Another question is why are they hitting B&H in particular and not other larger retailers like Walmart, Target, Etc. That are selling the same kinds of products?
Mine still does it. A couple tested positive and weren't ready to go back inside.The FCC doesn't have either the staff or the political will to go after Part 15 devices, unless somebody complains about interference. As long as nobody complains and/or the range of the transmitter is kept to 200 feet or less (per OET 63, which is not codified in Part 15, but is what the FCC goes by), they aren't going to do squat. Especially when used in church parking lots, which was rather common during COVID.
Amazon stocks and fulfills orders for all sorts of fraudulent stuff. At least with eBay they can make the argument that its third party internationally based sellers that typically sell these types of items. Amazon stocks this stuff in their US based warehouses. On Amazon you can find memory cards that advertise large capacities that don't even exist yet like 2TB microSD cards, or capacities that exist but for an impossibly low price. You can find portable battery banks that advertise outrageously high mAh values that would be impossible to fit inside their case. You can find TV antennas that advertise ranges of over 200 miles. Many of these item listing are full fake reviews to make it look like they are legit products. If a brick and mortar store sold items like this they would get in trouble, but for some reason Amazon gets away with it.
It's stupid that they got busted for transmitters from reputable brands like Rolls and Scosche which comply with the Part 15 field strength limit but broke the rules in minor ways, such as having a removable antenna connector or being able to transmit on 87.9 MHz (Part 15 strictly only allows 88.0 to 108.0 MHz), while Amazon and eBay are full of no-name Chinese FM transmitters which grossly exceed the Part 15 field strength limit, with output power as high as 20 watts.
For example, this 7 watt FM transmitter with 76-108 MHz coverage, available for $69 on Amazon, sold and shipped by them:
Bluetooth adapters arent transmitters for a radio station though. Granted they share the same frequencies as FM Broadcast radio like we Hams share the 2 Meter band with the Military (At least we DID at one point. Not sure if we still do however) but they're VERY different beastsIt is the FCC's duty to perform market surveillance and order offending products off the market. To that end, I'm curious how many FM bluetooth adapters they have ordered off the market all-time... because everyone I've ever seen worked below 88.1 MHz.
EDIT: 88.1, not 89.1.