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Brenda Ann wrote:
"al goss" wrote in message type accepted means CB gear must be not amateur radio gear. I think what people may be thinking about is that ham gear must be Part 15 certified (for the receiver) if it's commercially built, whereas home brew gear need not be. True, but Part 15 testing has nothing to do with type acceptance. AND, amateur radio gear is still required to meet the Part 15 radiation specifications even if the equipment is homebrew. You don't need to send it off to a certification lab, but if you're radiating trash out of band, you're in violation of the law. I'll say that the broadcast service normally requires type acceptance on transmitters as well, BUT there's still an exception for homebrew broadcast gear... your local AM station can put a homebuilt transmitter on the air as long as it meets the technical specifications and it has a nameplate on the front stating that it was homebuilt. (The wording required is quite specific but it's listed in Part 73.) --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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