First, I apologize for opening what seems to be a rift over who has the proper power in FM transmitters, who is legal and who isn't!
It was not my intention to discuss what legalities are open for FCC scrutiny, but rather to open discussion on differnt setups, techniques, what works, etc.
Seems it opened distrust, envy, legal discussions on who has more power, etc. but in reality I don't care if you have 1 watt, 10 watt, .001 microwatt or whatever, it's not important to me but how important it is to you should you get visited by the FCC.
I know what I have is going to meet the rule of the FCC and others telling me I'm over the FCC is just blowing in the wind, I'll answer that later.
What seems to me is all discussion on this board seems to be of a negative nature no matter what the issue. The post below is based on info by the FCC and you can bear it or move on.
"Q - I asked how much output power? How is that measured ?
A - First, for clarity the measured power is not based on output power from the transmitter but rather on received energy at the test receiver antenna..This test must be performed for the manufacturer at an FCC accepted Contract Test Site or the FCC office in Maryland to receive certification..The transmitter is placed on a table that rotates, 3 meters(10feet) from a certified antenna, then the antenna is raised and lowered and the table is rotated to find the strongest possible signal. After that factor is found then the test receiver attached to the test antenna measures the received power level (it must be less than 47dbm/v per meter using an average detector not Quasi peak..
Q - Gosh, I'm getting a nose bleed, just tell me why in simple terms.
A - Because this insures that the signal will only travel a specific distance and will quickly die out past that. Some designs will have higher power and small antennas (internal), while others will have less designed output power with larger antennas (telescoping), or on some designs there is an attached wire you can string out. The 250micro volts is the amount of power received at the test antenna at 10 feet(3meters), not the amount of power transmitted from the device... Remember, these are not broadcast licensed transmitters and are certified under strict rules."
I'm not going to clarify what is said other than it states power output of the FM transmitter is not the issue but rather how well your antenna put out the signal in terms of the 250uv/3m per part15n rules.
Now I mentioned the Pico measured less than the 47dbmV output putting it at the legal power per part15 rules and is certified as such... I need to say nothing more!
Please understand I will continue to use the equipment I KNOW is legal knowing full well I am NOT breaking any laws. Now those that believe they are transmitting with whatever equipment they have are doing what they feel is best for their situation knowing that any visit from the FCC, they will have to prove THEY are legal.
Radiopilot
It was not my intention to discuss what legalities are open for FCC scrutiny, but rather to open discussion on differnt setups, techniques, what works, etc.
Seems it opened distrust, envy, legal discussions on who has more power, etc. but in reality I don't care if you have 1 watt, 10 watt, .001 microwatt or whatever, it's not important to me but how important it is to you should you get visited by the FCC.
I know what I have is going to meet the rule of the FCC and others telling me I'm over the FCC is just blowing in the wind, I'll answer that later.
What seems to me is all discussion on this board seems to be of a negative nature no matter what the issue. The post below is based on info by the FCC and you can bear it or move on.
"Q - I asked how much output power? How is that measured ?
A - First, for clarity the measured power is not based on output power from the transmitter but rather on received energy at the test receiver antenna..This test must be performed for the manufacturer at an FCC accepted Contract Test Site or the FCC office in Maryland to receive certification..The transmitter is placed on a table that rotates, 3 meters(10feet) from a certified antenna, then the antenna is raised and lowered and the table is rotated to find the strongest possible signal. After that factor is found then the test receiver attached to the test antenna measures the received power level (it must be less than 47dbm/v per meter using an average detector not Quasi peak..
Q - Gosh, I'm getting a nose bleed, just tell me why in simple terms.
A - Because this insures that the signal will only travel a specific distance and will quickly die out past that. Some designs will have higher power and small antennas (internal), while others will have less designed output power with larger antennas (telescoping), or on some designs there is an attached wire you can string out. The 250micro volts is the amount of power received at the test antenna at 10 feet(3meters), not the amount of power transmitted from the device... Remember, these are not broadcast licensed transmitters and are certified under strict rules."
I'm not going to clarify what is said other than it states power output of the FM transmitter is not the issue but rather how well your antenna put out the signal in terms of the 250uv/3m per part15n rules.
Now I mentioned the Pico measured less than the 47dbmV output putting it at the legal power per part15 rules and is certified as such... I need to say nothing more!
Please understand I will continue to use the equipment I KNOW is legal knowing full well I am NOT breaking any laws. Now those that believe they are transmitting with whatever equipment they have are doing what they feel is best for their situation knowing that any visit from the FCC, they will have to prove THEY are legal.
Radiopilot