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FCC and 47
This mmWave WPAN operates in clear band including 57 – 64 GHz unlicensed band defined by FCC 47 CFR 15. 255.
Note 1: The FCC registration program requires the registering of terminal equipment and protective circuitry in accordance with Subpart C of part 68, Title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
The FCC service rules for Rural Radiotelephone are located in 47 C. F. R.
In the United States, the modern demarcation point is a device defined by FCC rules ( 47 C. F. R.
( 47 CFR 73. 853 ) Also, the one and so far only " window " for applications closed in 2003, and at present, the FCC is not entertaining any new broadcast license applications, instead conducting auctions of frequencies for full-power uses only.
The FCC regulations for ERP and HAAT are listed under Title 47, Part 73 of the Code of Federal Regulations ( CFR ).
Two-Way Radio Narrowbanding refers to a U. S. Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) Order issued in December 2004 requiring all CFR 47 Part 90 VHF ( 150-174 MHz ) and UHF ( 421-512 MHz ) PLMR ( Private Land Mobile Radio ) licensees operating legacy wideband ( 25 kHz bandwidth ) voice or data / SCADA systems to migrate to narrowband ( 12. 5 kHz bandwidth or equivalent ) systems by January 1, 2013.
When the US telephone industry was opened to more competition in the 1980s, the specifications became US law, ordered by the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 47 CFR Part 68, Subpart F superseded by T1. TR5-1999.
The government expresses little governance of ARES ( other than the FCC regulations -- 47 CFR Part 97 -- which regulate all of Amateur Radio ) and local authorities only passively regulate ARES groups by way of formal understandings.
* Title 47: Telecommunication ( also known as the " FCC Rules ", administered by the Federal Communications Commission )
Code of Federal Regulations, Title 47, Part 15 ( 47 CFR 15 ) is an oft-quoted part of Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) rules and regulations regarding unlicensed transmissions.
states that any radiator ( that which emits radio energy ), whether or not intentional, must be licensed unless it meets 47 CFR 15 or is otherwise exempted by the FCC.
* FCC CFR Title 47
Before the public meeting, Thigpenn had already contacted the Broadcast Bureau of the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) to discover that two analog television frequencies ( channels 30 and 47 ) were available for broadcast in Jacksonville.
In 2004, the FCC required all CFR 47 Part 90 VHF ( 150-174 MHz ) and UHF ( 421-512 MHz ) PLMR ( Private Land Mobile Radio ) licensees operating legacy wideband ( 25 kHz bandwidth ) voice or data / SCADA systems to migrate to narrowband ( 12. 5 kHz bandwidth or equivalent ) systems
* Class B electronic device, conforming to FCC rule Title 47 CFR Part 15, Subpart B, Class B
These systems are licensed by the FCC in the United States under 47 CFR Sec.
Public-access television was created in the United States between 1969 and 1971 by the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) and has since been mandated under the Cable Communications Act of 1984, which is codified under 47 USC § 531.
WLNY-DT requested channel 47 as its final, in-core broadcast channel after the end of the 2009 DTV conversion, but the FCC initially ruled the election in conflict with another station -- WNJU, a Spanish-language station licensed to Linden, New Jersey which broadcast its analog signal on channel 47.
Eventually the issues were worked through and WLNY gained FCC approval for its move to digital channel 47, which it began broadcasting from on June 13, 2009.
FCC regulations, and specifically Title 47 Part 22. 925 ( Oct 1, 2006 revision ), states " Cellular telephones installed in or carried aboard airplanes, balloons or any other type of aircraft must not be operated while such aircraft are airborne ( not touching the ground ).
* 47 CFR § 22. 925: FCC prohibition of airborne cell phone use, 1Oct2006

FCC and CFR
The FCC derives regulatory authority from the TCPA, adopted as CFR 64. 1200 and the Telemarketing and Consumer Fraud and Abuse Prevention Act, 15 U. S. C.
The FCC removed Subpart F from the CFR and added Subpart G, which delegates the task to the ACTA.
The term is used by the U. S. Government's Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) to regulate broadcast, cable, and satellite transmissions, according to the Code of Federal Regulations, at 47 CFR § 76. 51 and FCC. gov.
LIN TV included in its license transfer request to the FCC a " failing station waiver ," an indication that the station was in an economically non-viable position and that FCC should relax ownership limits that apply to the Green Bay market ( CFR § 73. 3555 ( b )( 2 ) of the FCC's rules ) so that channel 14 could stay on the air.
The frequency of 89. 1 in the New York metropolitan area is actually reserved by the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) for the United Nations ( to a maximum of 20 kW effective radiated power at up to HAAT, per 47 CFR § 73. 501.
The official rules from the FCC are contained in Title 47 CFR Part 73:

FCC and Part
In the US, 802. 11a and 802. 11g devices may be operated without a license, as allowed in Part 15 of the FCC Rules and Regulations.
Licensed amateur radio operators may operate 802. 11b / g devices under Part 97 of the FCC Rules and Regulations, allowing increased power output but not commercial content or encryption.
In the United States of America, uses of the ISM bands are governed by Part 18 of the FCC rules, while Part 15 contains the rules for unlicensed communication devices, even those that use the ISM frequencies.
QRP enthusiasts contend that this is not always necessary, and doing so wastes power, increases the likelihood of causing interference to nearby televisions, radios, and telephones and, for United States ' amateurs is incompatible with FCC Part 97 rule, which states that one must use " the minimum power necessary to carry out the desired communications.
Due to the efforts of Merrill Swan, W6AEE, of the " The RTTY Society of Southern California " publisher of RTTY and Wayne Green, W2NSD, of CQ Magazine, Amateur Radio operators successfully petitioned the U. S. Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) to amend Part 12 of the Regulations, which was effective on February 20, 1953.
After investigation and a petition to the FCC, Part 12 was amended, in March 1956, to allow Amateur Radio Operators to use any shift that was less than 900 hertz.
On January 7, 1972, the FCC amended Part 97 to allow faster RTTY speeds.
FCC Part 15 mandates at least 50 different channels and at least a 2. 5 Hz hop rate for narrow band frequency-hopping systems.
* FCC Part 15 Rules that cover frequency hopping
* Frequency hopping in unlicensed spectrum describes strategies for adaptive hopping in crowded spectrum, while considering the issues of radio etiquette and compliance with FCC Part 15 Rules
In the US, these fall under Part 15 of the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) regulations.
One aspect of Tempest testing that distinguishes it from limits on spurious emissions ( e. g. FCC Part 15 ) is a requirement of absolute minimal correlation between radiated energy or detectable emissions and any plaintext data that are being processed.
In the North America, active devices that are characterized as " unintentional radiators " are governed by Part 15 of the FCC regulations and its CRTC equivalents in Canada.
Prior to the advent of the LPFM discussion and eventual rulemaking at the FCC, Low Power FM operations were found legally under FCC Part 15. 239 in the form of single transmitters and radiating cable operations.
* FCC Part 90 LMR VHF / UHF Narrowbanding Information and Licensee Resources
Prior to the change of CB radio from licensed to " permitted by part " ( FCC rules Part 95 ) status, the typical toy walkie-talkie available in North America was limited to 100 milliwatts of power on transmit and using one or two crystal-controlled channels in the 27 MHz citizens ' band using amplitude modulation ( AM ) only.
The Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Service ( RACES ) is a standby radio service provided for in Part 97. 407 of the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) rules and regulations governing amateur radio in the United States.
Some systems operate with U. S. Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) licensed frequencies and others under FCC Part 15 which allows use of unlicensed radio frequencies.

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