"Lancer" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 21 Apr 2005 11:28:55 -0500, "Kevin, WB5RUE"
wrote:
wrote in message
.. .
On 20 Apr 2005 07:25:46 -0700, wrote:
It is the responsibilty of the CB'er to get rid of the interference,
especially interference (if it is a) on a commercial "fire" radio.
Sounds to me that the CB'er does not have proper grounding or his
antenna is too low.
Transmitters of any type can create interference. It is not the
responsibility of the CB'er to get rid of the interference as long
as he is being legal.
If you are interfering with emergency equipment it's ALWAYS your
responsibility to fix it. Even if it means stopping your transmitting
altogether. Emergency equipment ALWAYS takes precedence.
Kevin, WB5RUE
Which F.C.C Regulation says that?
You know, I shouldn't have to site a "regulation." It's a no-brainer to
those who will think about it. However it's not just an "FCC rule". It's
illegal to interfere with any kind of emergency communication regardless of
the source or method. If it's "unintentional" you are expected to either
stop or fix the problem. If you need statutes I can find them from all
levels and branches of government....or you can go look them up yourself.
Maybe you should do that, you might learn something.
Kevin, WB5RUE
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