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If your modulation spreads the power evenly over 500kHz, if I
understand the rules right, you can transmit 1 watt. If your modulation spreads the power evenly over 50kHz, you could transmit 0.1 watts (+20dBm). If your modulation spreads the power evenly over 5kHz, you could transmit 0.01 watts (+10dBm). It _appears_ that you could transmit +8dBm (6.something milliwatts) however you want in that band: as an unmodulated carrier, or spread however you want. I don't suppose they talk about the time period over which you measure the spectral power density...but they probably wouldn't like it if you transmitte 1 watt that swept linearly and slowly across the 500kHz, say once a minute. Over a long enough period, that would be uniform power per unit bandwidth, but a one second snapshot would show 1 watt in 500kHz/60 = 8.3kHz bandwidth. Hope that makes sense. Beyond that--see your lawyer! ;-) Cheers, Tom |
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