[Amps] Peak Power

Robert B. Bonner rbonner at qro.com
Mon Oct 16 12:28:03 EDT 2006


You make some interesting points Hal,

Sort of funny that my bud was cited by them OPERATING his transmitter not
him.

While he had a Bird 43 (what the feds consider the only real wattmeter) his
was not a peak reading version capable of legally metering the PEP OUTPUT.

Maybe that should be a required item?  Get a license, get a BIRD?

We had the same issue when I was a first officer flying for FEDEX, we had a
Capt. I flew with on occasion who wore a Rolex.  There was a delay in the
A/C leaving the ramp.  The company inspector got into everyone's face
because of the delay and time discrepancy between the ramp manager and Capt.

The ramp manager wittingly stated the difference was caused by ROLEX TIME vs
TIMEX TIME.  It's probably still a company joke 15 years later.

And where this thing applies to topic....  While this was quickly dispatched
the FEDS have the deck stacked in their favor. The point is, they made the
amp make illegal power not my buddy, they did whatever was necessary to
violate him.

They wouldn't have been allowed to leave my shack if they'd tried to pull
that here.

BOB DD

-----Original Message-----
From: amps-bounces at contesting.com [mailto:amps-bounces at contesting.com] On
Behalf Of Harold Mandel
Sent: Monday, October 16, 2006 9:37 AM
To: Gudguyham at aol.com; amps at contesting.com
Subject: Re: [Amps] Peak Power

What does it matter how much power is capable of
being generated by an amateur station when the operator
monitors the power output so as not to exceed the limitations
of his license class and the limitations of the band operated in?

I run 2KW in some bands and 200 watts in other bands, even though
my equipment can easily exceed that power, can transmit out-of-band,
and can over modulate (splatter) if I so desire.

An FCC inspector is welcome to visit and to look over my station. In
NYC one actually did, because my neighbors complained about my 
6 meter AM signals bashing their wooden television sets in 1962.

The FCC inspector saw what I was running, saw my B&W filters
and the end result was while not being cited I was restricted to "quiet
hours"
because of the inability of the tube operated television sets to reject
50MHz
energy. 

We can go right to Continental and order a 20KW transmitter tomorrow, have
them ship it, hook it up to 3-phase power, warm it up and if we have the
license,
transmit with it at the maximum allowed power at a particular frequency our
license
allows us to emit at. An FCC inspector has no ability to say we are not
allowed to
own any equipment. If the FCC cares to conduct a field investigation their
observed
data must show Werp that exceeds the licensed service, and not what it might
be capable of.

That's the same thing as getting busted for having a car that can go 150MPH,
or for
having a working airplane in a hanger, but no pilot's license.

Broadcasters are required to have Log Entries for the transmitter (at least
they used to), that
shows the plate voltage, plate current, etc. This was used for the
Proof-Of-Performance 
testing and to show to an FCC inspector should there be a problem with the
radiated signal.

Amateurs used to keep log books, too, that showed power levels. We had to
keep them
for a year or so, and the rules used to be that we had to have operated a
minimum amount
to renew licenses. Not any more, though. 

Hal
W4HBM

-----Original Message-----
From: amps-bounces at contesting.com [mailto:amps-bounces at contesting.com] On
Behalf Of Gudguyham at aol.com
Sent: Monday, October 16, 2006 10:10 AM
To: k7fm at teleport.com; rbonner at qro.com; amps at contesting.com
Subject: Re: [Amps] Peak Power

In a message dated 10/16/2006 9:37:51 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
k7fm at teleport.com writes:

The  inspector looked around and found a power switch under the  
console. 
 
Ahhh, another case solved by the infamous "hidden switch".  Better  find a 
better hiding space for that switch guys.......Lou

 
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