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Old September 17th 04, 05:58 PM
Dr.X
 
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"Dave VanHorn" wrote in message
...

What's up with that anyway? It seems that on the back of most consumer
electronics there's a notice saying it must not cause interference and

it
must accept interference. What's it going to be? If my radio causes
interference, is my neighbor supposed to just take it because the notice
says so? And if that's the case, why should I as an op worry about it?


They do create a bit of an ambiguous situation.
When two unlicenced devices interfere, it would appear that both are SOL.
If a type-accepted CB device is interfering with a part 15 device, then as

I
understand it, the part 15 device is SOL.


But wouldn't the CB device op be required to make changes? He's the one
causing the interferance. My memory of such things is quite dusty.

--
KC6ETE Dave's Engineering Page, www.dvanhorn.org
Microcontroller Consultant, specializing in Atmel AVR


I checked out your site. I liked the "no active linear" amplifier. Have you
ever tried something similar to that to amplitude-modulate the collector of
a mosfet rf amp? Just curious. It would be like digital audio except the
audio amps would need to be at least about half the wattage of the rf amp.
(that could get ugly. :-P )

-Dr.X