Maker Pro
Maker Pro

FCC 15, home or office use.

J

John Woodgate

dated Tue said:
If I read that right then you are asking for 'best practice', without
responsibility (and a cut of the profits as an expert witness).

I don't understand. I'm not asking for anything, I just explained the
EMC Directive, that's all.
 
E

Eeyore

Genome said:
I have read the manual for my device and the FCC 15 statement says something
like.

If the device interferes with something else then I should re-orientate or
re-position the something else. If something else interferes with the device
then I should re-orientate or re-position the device.

So, I was thinking about building this powerful electronic aeroplane messing
about with thing and installing it in something like a Winnebago and driving
about airport perimeters. Obviously I'd have to stick some big letters on
the side saying FCC 15 compliant and add some small print and have an
instruction manual.

So, if aeroplanes start falling out of the sky, I can point to the relevant
section and suggest that they sort of fly them elsewhere or in different
directions. Of course, if the aeroplanes start dropping too close I can
drive my home/office down the road a bit.

As a result I am fully compliant.

No you aren't. You can only do that in America. Over here it has to be CE
compliant.

Graham
 
E

Eeyore

PeteS said:
We have EN55022 (which has A and B), sometimes known (even in the
states) as 'Harmonised emissions standards' for most equipment. There
are others if you have communications equipment (R&TTE directives for
example)

That's a standard, not a regulation though.

This is the law....................
Statutory Instrument 2005 No. 281
The Electromagnetic Compatibility Regulations 2005
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/si/si2005/20050281.htm

Graham
 
L

Luhan

Tim said:
He was right and wrong.

Amateur radio transmitters aren't licensed by the FCC. Rather, the
amateur operator is assumed to know his stuff, and is required to insure
that his transmissions follow the rules. The rules are worded this way
to distinguish the amateur operator (who can build his own stuff if he
wants) from the Citizen's Band or Family Radio band operator (who can
only buy certified equipment, and gets slapped if he modifies it).

If, indeed, his transmissions are up to snuff then indeed you are out of
luck. It's considered Very Good Form for the operator in question to
help his neighbors out with this sort of problem, but that is etiquette,
not law.

When my father had Ham Radio, he used to install 'Drake-2B' IIRC,
filters on the neighbors TVs. One guy, however, liked just listening
in and asked my father if his TV could be fixed so he could also hear
the other Ham operator!

Luhan
 
D

Don Bowey

I remember the days I used to live a few houses down from a HAM with a
tall antenna on his roof and a habit for transmitting SSB worldwide in
the evenings. When I toild him I could hear his transmissions through
my LP turntable, he told me that since his transmitter was licensed by
the FCC and my turntable wasn't that it was not his problem.

He was correct, but the FCC expects hams to be helpful by at least offering
advice about the problem with your (poorly designed) audio system.

If you had complained to the FCC, he might have received a nastygram from
them.

Don
 
E

Eeyore

PeteS said:
True enough, but passing one of the myriad standards (or more than one)
is a requirement for CE, of course :)

Quite so. Although a search for IEC or EN gets zero matches.

Graham
 
E

Eeyore

Genome said:
Look, shit for ****, this is my thread and you can go **** off due to lack
of anything useful.

You'll find plenty of useful posts of mine in this thread actually. Do you need
some consultancy ?

Graham
 
E

Eeyore

martin said:
Is there an english version available?

martin

LOL ! I know exactly how you feel. There's not even a single reference to IEC,
EN or BSEN in the entire document either.

Graham
 
G

Genome

Eeyore said:
You'll find plenty of useful posts of mine in this thread actually. Do you
need
some consultancy ?

Graham

I see some replies but nothing useful.

DNA
 
M

martin griffith

snipified

LOL ! I know exactly how you feel. There's not even a single reference to IEC,
EN or BSEN in the entire document either.

Graham
Any links to diy emc testing for (semi-pro) audio products, or emc
test company who understands audio?

Major Bloodnok said :
Open your wallets, and say after me:

"Help yourself"

Cos I've got a bun in the oven that may need tweaking


martin
 
E

Eeyore

martin said:
On Tue, 22 Aug 2006 21:43:32 +0100, in sci.electronics.design Eeyore

snipified
Any links to diy emc testing for (semi-pro) audio products, or emc
test company who understands audio?

Major Bloodnok said :
Open your wallets, and say after me:

"Help yourself"

Cos I've got a bun in the oven that may need tweaking

Any help here ?
http://www.compliance-club.com/

I used to get the printed magazine. It was quite informative.

Graham
 
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