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On Feb 12, 4:40 pm, Nate Bargmann
wrote: It doesn't take much. Back in the early '90s a group of us were returning from a hamfest and I was riding in the back seat of one guy's late '80s Ford something or other (Crown Victoria, maybe?). I was using my HT to If something is sensitive to RF, it probably won't take much to cause it to malfunction. The fact is that nobody does RF shielding or protection for consumer electronics, so there is no set power limit below which a device may not be affected. The increased prevalence of EMI/EMC problems means that modern cars are MUCH better about this. Almost all new cars go through a fairly rigorous test program for immunity from radiated fields. Nobody wants to have the engine or braking control systems fail when the police car next to them calls home on their VHF low band radio. There's rafts of SAE specs for this, but I don't recall the field strengths. Several hundred volts/m though, is what I think. Aftermarket addons (stereos, nav systems, etc.) aren't nearly as good on the account. Some automotive equipment is exempt from Part 15 (for instance, the nifty OBD II readers are pretty good RFI emitters...) |
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