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In article ,
ned wrote: I thought there would be some reviews, faq's, etc., that would state which radios were more "user friendly", but apparently it's not that simple. I don't believe there is anything unethical or illegal about re-programming as long as you only transmit on the licensed frequency, but if I'm wrong please let me know. In most cases, in order to transmit legally on a frequency band of the sort you're discussing, you must be licensed for that frequency _and_ you must use a radio which is "certificated" (formerly "type accepted") for use on that frequency band. The certification is, in effect, a statement by the radio's manufacturer that it is compliant with the FCC regulations for that band - maximum power output, frequency accuracy, spurious emissions, and so forth. Amateur radio transmitters are an exception to the rule. They don't have to be certificated, because the amateur radio service is intended to support experimental and home-brew use, and because the (licensed) operator has accepted legal responsibility for not transmitting in ways which break the regulations. So... if you reprogram a commercial or public-safety radio onto a frequency band outside of what it was originally certificated for, or if you physically modify it, you're likely to void its certification, and it might not be legal to use it either on the original frequencies or on the new ones. You could reprogram it for amateur-radio use, though, and that'd be legal as long as its emissions met the standards. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |