There have been posts here regarding the ~11 nanowatt power the Part15 FM transmitters are to have... Why do I and others as well should have a problem with this amount of power?
First my receiver has a sensitivity of 45uv for the 'stereo pilot' to activate and the mono mode it is 4.5uv to receive that same signal... now at 45uv that equates to -74dBm (which is a little less than 1nw), the mono signal would be
-94dBm (which is approx .001nw), BUT that is at the receiver side and not at the transmitter... and why do I know this.. because the Belkin Tunecast II is a Part 15 certified FM transmitter and is rated for -22dbm at 107.9 MHz and
-15dbm at 88.1 MHz ... so at -22dBm that power is approx. .01mw and at -15dBM that power is approx. less than 1/10 of 1mw.... or .1mw....
Anyone can measure this signal... it's a measured signal right from of the O'scope (picture available) and an unmodified Belkin Tunecast! These Belkin units are certified for 150uv/3 meters and not 250uv/3 meters so using that logic one can see that the 'true' Part-15 FM transmitters do have more power at the output end than ~11nw as some suggest here...
To prove the above go to your 'tuner/recveiver' specifications and see what you need for the signal to be present at the antenna.
Radiopilot
First my receiver has a sensitivity of 45uv for the 'stereo pilot' to activate and the mono mode it is 4.5uv to receive that same signal... now at 45uv that equates to -74dBm (which is a little less than 1nw), the mono signal would be
-94dBm (which is approx .001nw), BUT that is at the receiver side and not at the transmitter... and why do I know this.. because the Belkin Tunecast II is a Part 15 certified FM transmitter and is rated for -22dbm at 107.9 MHz and
-15dbm at 88.1 MHz ... so at -22dBm that power is approx. .01mw and at -15dBM that power is approx. less than 1/10 of 1mw.... or .1mw....
Anyone can measure this signal... it's a measured signal right from of the O'scope (picture available) and an unmodified Belkin Tunecast! These Belkin units are certified for 150uv/3 meters and not 250uv/3 meters so using that logic one can see that the 'true' Part-15 FM transmitters do have more power at the output end than ~11nw as some suggest here...
To prove the above go to your 'tuner/recveiver' specifications and see what you need for the signal to be present at the antenna.
Radiopilot