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Re: [RFI] Solar Panel RFI Awareness At Dayton

To: Michael Martin <mike@rfiservices.com>
Subject: Re: [RFI] Solar Panel RFI Awareness At Dayton
From: "Hare, Ed, W1RFI" <w1rfi@arrl.org>
Date: Fri, 27 May 2022 13:32:12 +0000
List-post: <mailto:rfi@contesting.com>
And we send that message to utilities, too.  And yes, those 50+ sources were a 
real experience, showing an investigator who made a decision that the utility 
should think is as unfair as the ham thought the first decision was.

It's interesting, Mike, to see how those who have been in this game for decades 
like you and me know exactly why we do things the ways we do. Our credibility 
with the FCC and most of the utility industry is high, because we support what 
is true and right. We will back a utility that legitimately finds a non-utility 
device generating noise; we at least accept that a utility only needs to fix 
noise sources that cause actual interference, although correcting some of the 
others is good maintenance practice.

I also know from experience, as do you, that a formal FCC complaint changes 
things, but, like field investigations, it can change things for the better  or 
for the worse.  In many cases, when the FCC letter shows up, the lawyers take 
over. For that reason, if the utility is responsive at all and willing to try 
to fix it, we will help them in any way we can.
If things are still at the staff level, we are all better off keeping it there, 
and use the FCC only as a last resort.
________________________________
From: Michael Martin <mike@rfiservices.com>
Sent: Friday, May 27, 2022 8:40 AM
To: Hare, Ed, W1RFI <w1rfi@arrl.org>
Cc: David Eckhardt <davearea51a@gmail.com>; Dave (NK7Z) <dave@nk7z.net>; Rfi 
List <rfi@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [RFI] Solar Panel RFI Awareness At Dayton

Watch what you wish for, agreed!
Those scenarios are very familiar to me. And there are many additional stories 
to support what it is saying.

Imagine being diagnosed with 50 interference sources in the FCC demanding they 
be fixed. Only to discover that not one of those 50 sources were a contributor 
to the noise level the ham was experiencing.

Sometimes the paper tiger is best left undisturbed!

Michael Martin
RFI Services
240-508-3760
<http://www.rfiservices.com>www.rfiservices.com<http://www.rfiservices.com> is 
under construction and will be up and running soon.

Get BlueMail for Android<https://bluemail.me>
On May 27, 2022, at 7:10 AM, "Hare, Ed, W1RFI" 
<w1rfi@arrl.org<mailto:w1rfi@arrl.org>> wrote:

As amateurs, we should very much prefer it the way it is rather than having the 
FCC be 100% responsible for "enforcing its own rules."  We can be assured that 
if FCC were to 100% take on that task, the first thing it do is to make a clear 
definition of harmful interference that I can assure you we would not like.

Be careful what you ask for because you just might get it and then have to live 
with the aftermath.  The League staff are very much aware of what they are 
choosing to do and why they undertake what the FCC will not.  We, in fact, work 
at not demanding the FCC field investigations that some hams think will make 
their case. It probably will not.

Let me tell you a Tale of Two RFI Cases.

In one case, a ham had S9 interference.  The utility screwed around endlessly 
and the FCC finally was able to have a team going there for other reasons look 
at the noise. It could not determine the source, so it told the amateur that 
because he could hear some signals on the band, it was not harmful 
interference, so the FCC was going to close the case and take no action.  You 
would not believe the difficulty in getting that decision overturned.

In another instance involving S9 noise, and FCC field investigation identified 
over 50 noise sources and told the utility to fix them all.

It's a crap shoot, then, right?  No, it's worse!  Both of those were the same 
case in Texas, with two different FCC investigators.  Do you REALLY want to see 
the FCC enforcing the RFI rules? If so, without ARRL's staff getting and 
staying involved, it would have been game over after the first investigation.

If FCC enforces, this will ultimately be turned over to multiple field offices, 
with investigators for which RFI is a sideline at best, and a mystery at worst. 
We are MUCH better off having 1.5 staff in the ARRL Lab with literally 
world-class expertise and experience managing these cases, with help from local 
volunteers, doing all of the legwork and turning cases over to the FCC when 
necessary.  What ARRL has put together here, in collaboration with FCC and the 
involved industries, is as good as we are going to get in principle, always 
improvable in the details.  IMHO, it is a model of consumer/industry/regulator 
collaboration that will ultimately be adopted in other ways.

Ed Hare, W1RFI
ARRL Lab

________________________________

From: RFI <rfi-bounces+w1rfi=arrl.org<http://arrl.org>@contesting.com> on 
behalf of David Eckhardt <davearea51a@gmail.com>
Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2022 12:20 PM
To: Dave (NK7Z) <dave@nk7z.net>
Cc: Rfi List <rfi@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [RFI] Solar Panel RFI Awareness At Dayton

Dave, NK7Z, you hit the nails squarely on the heads in your last email.

Further, those of us who are members of ARRL are paying in our dues (or
life memberships) what FCC was originally tasked to do, among other tasks
within CFR47.  ARRL and the amateurs are now the RFI sleuths, especially
when it comes to home solar power installations.  So, our dues and life
memberships to ARRL should be tax deductible??

All have read my past rants on FCC shirking the responsibilities spelled
out in CFR47.  Now we amateurs and ARRL are tasked with some of those
responsibilities originally defined in  CFR47.  And all for free.......
Something is wrong with this picture!

Sure, FCC is severely short of funds.  And.,...... maybe ARRL has been
working with FCC for 20 years on.  But this is no excuse for handing their
own responsibilities, at no cost, off to a volunteer paid organization of
members.

Dave - W0LEV

On Wed, May 25, 2022 at 11:24 PM Dave (NK7Z) <dave@nk7z.net> wrote:

 If only the FCC enforced their own rules, I would agree with you...

 There is very little proactive enforcement happening up in this area,
 and I suspect elsewhere...

 RFI is rampant, and getting worse, not better.  It is a mindlessly
 simple task to locate a grow operations in most cases.  Yet the Amateur
 is the person on the front lines in location, and in first contact with
 the offender, exposing the Amateur to possible liability, and possible
 assault.

 The grow ops up here are far too big to be selling in state, which means
 they are selling out of state, which means they are illegal.  So the FCC
 is placing the Amateur in the position of possibly dealing with a drug
 offender...  The real issue is the RFI, not what is being grown, or
 warmed, or lit...  Just the RFI, but it is still the Amateur that has to
 knock on the door, and explain what is happening to whoever answers...

 The FCC is ham stringed by not enough funding, so we are the front
 line...  RFI enforcement has switched from proactive to reactive as a
 result of lack of funding-- unless you are a cell provider...  Then one
 call gets instant action, and-- god forbid you even think about starting
 a pirate FM station...

 In a perfect world, I would report RFI to the FCC, and they would send
 down a field engineer in a timely manner, locate the RFI, and fine, or
 warn the perpetrator, then followup with the operator of the device a
 few weeks later, to ascertain compliance levels.  This would force an
 overall reduction in the amount RFI, over time as consumers went after
 the installers, and the manufacturers.

 That is just not happening.  Thus the problem gets worse, not better.

 This is why I say, there is some reasonable level of RFI that the
 amateur is going to have to accept.  Be it right or wrong, that is the
 way it is working, and for the foreseeable future going to work.  This
 is very unfortunate.

 73,
 Dave,
 https://www.nk7z.net
 On 5/25/22 11:26, Jim Brown wrote:
 On 5/25/2022 1:38 AM, Dave (NK7Z) wrote:
 Respectfully I am saying that at some point there is a level at which
 the FCC will say too bad, live with it.  That level will be above what
 things were before the solar installation arrived.

 FCC Rules say that if a product interferes with licensed radio operation
 that use of it must be discontinued.

 73, Jim K9YC
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--
*Dave - WØLEV*
*Just Let Darwin Work*
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