FCC Web Documents citing 15.35
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- by § 2.925 and other relevant sections in this chapter [emphasis added]. In addition, Section 15.239(b) of the Rules provides that: The field strength of any emissions within the permitted 200 kHz band shall not exceed 250 microvolts/meter at 3 meters. The emission limit in this paragraph is based on measurement instrumentation employing an average detector. The provisions in § 15.35 for limiting peak emissions apply. Power 7 admits that it manufactured 66,750 FM Cup Transmitters and shipped them to Macally between March 29, 2007 and April 12, 2008; that those devices were uncertified; and that all FM Cup Transmitters shipped between March and October 2007 were non-compliant with the emissions limit of 15.239(b) of the Rules. We find, therefore, that
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- 46.89 49.18 49.10 Bangladesh 0.24 0.26 Not Available 0.30 Barbados 34.53 36.99 40.43 42.40 Belgium 45.75 46.52 46.81 50.02 Belize 13.40 13.33 13.69 13.75 Bolivia 4.68 4.32 6.88 6.88 Brazil 8.51 9.57 10.66 12.05 Brunei Darussalam 23.99 26.26 Not Available 24.68 Bulgaria 30.57 31.26 32.26 32.89 Canada 59.98 60.24 60.95 63.39 Chile 13.20 15.59 17.98 20.55 Colombia 9.98 11.76 14.75 15.35 Cote d'Ivoire 0.81 0.88 0.93 1.19 Cyprus 53.83 55.48 56.97 58.51 Czech Republic 23.65 27.31 31.84 36.39 Denmark 60.82 61.79 63.33 65.97 Dominica 24.13 26.39 Not Available 25.23 Dominican Republic 7.37 8.26 Not Available 9.28 Ecuador 6.52 7.33 7.53 7.83 El Salvador 5.28 5.61 Not Available 8.00 Estonia 27.74 29.87 32.10 34.29 Finland 55.01 54.90 55.59 55.39 France 55.80 56.36
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- additional burden to the other allocated services. Additionally, there is a secondary space research allocation covering 14.5-15.35 GHz. The possibility of upgrading all or part of this allocation to primary status is under investigation. U.S. VIEW: The U.S. supports the need for additional space research service downlink spectrum below 30 GHz to facilitate broadband SRS mission requirements. Either the 14.5 -15.35 GHz or 25.5-27 GHz bands under study would fulfill the SRS requirements. The U.S. anticipates submitting a proposal to WRC-2003 for a primary SRS allocation within the bands under investigation. (February 6, 2001) Radio Conference Subcommittee (RCS) Preparation for ITU Radiocommunication Conferences DRAFT UNITED STATES PRELIMINARY VIEWS ON WRC-03 WRC-2003 Agenda Item 1.12d: to consider allocations and regulatory issues related
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- orbiting spacecraft. Additionally, it should be noted that a number of ITU-R and Space Frequency Coordination Group (SFCG) recommendations indicate 15 GHz as a preferred band for SRS missions. Recommendation ITU-R SA.1344 identifies the 15 GHz band as preferred from a technical standpoint for wideband SRS (space VLBI) missions. Specifically, Recommendation ITU-R SA.1344 recommends the use of the 14.5 to 15.35 GHz for space-to-earth telemetry transmissions with a typical RF bandwidth of 300-500 MHz. Similarly, Recommendation ITU-R SA.364-6 recommends the use of the 12-20 GHz band for SRS missions in the space-to-earth direction. The 14.5-15.35 GHz band is currently allocated to the fixed and mobile services on a primary basis, and to the space research service on a secondary basis. In
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- GHz (SHF) Page 67 International Table United States Table FCC Rule Part(s) Region 1 Region 2 Region 3 Federal Government Non-Federal Government 14.5-14.8 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.510 MOBILE Space research 14.5-14.7145 FIXED Mobile Space research 14.5-14.7145 14.7145-15.1365 MOBILE Fixed Space research US310 14.7145-15.1365 US310 14.8-15.35 FIXED MOBILE Space research 15.1365-15.35 FIXED Mobile Space research 5.339 US211 15.1365-15.35 5.339 US211 5.339 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY SPACE RESEARCH (passive) 5.340 5.511 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY US74 SPACE RESEARCH (passive) US246 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511D 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260 US211 Aviation (87) 15.43-15.63 FIXED SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.511A AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511C 15.43-15.63 AERONAUTICAL RADIO- NAVIGATION US260 5.511C US211 US359 15.4-15.43 FIXED SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) AERONAUTICAL RADIO- NAVIGATION US260 5.511C US211 US359 Satellite
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- The test report must provide sufficient information to determine how the average value of the emission was determined for all operating conditions of the transmitter. The carrier of transmitters operating under 47 CFR 15.231 is typically pulsed. Peak levels of emissions are measured, then the average levels are obtained by subtracting the duty cycle factor from the peak levels. Section 15.35 (c) of the rules provides a procedure for calculating the duty cycle and average value. A procedure for calculating the duty cycle is also provided in Section 13.1.4.2 of the America National Standard identified as ANSI Standard, C63.4 -2001. Unless a trainable transmitter is capable of only learning over a range of duty cycles, compliance should be based on the
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- around a subject over a 2 second interval. SafeView requests a waiver of Section 15.31(c) which requires swept frequency systems to be measured with the emission sweep stopped. When measured in this fashion, SafeView indicates that the equipment will comply with the average emission limits in Section 15.209. Safeview also requests a waiver of the peak emission limit in Section 15.35(b). The FCC's Office of Engineering and Technology (OET) is reviewing the waiver request. OET has concluded that in order to develop a complete record on the complex issues presented by this request, this proceeding will be treated, for ex parte purposes, as a "permit-but-disclose" proceeding, in accordance with Section 1.1200(a) of the Commission's rules, and is subject to the requirements
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- the spectrum analyzer may not always display the true peak value of the measured emission. This effect, called ``pulse desensitization,'' relates to the capabilities of the measuring instrument. For the measurement and reporting of the true peak of pulsed emissions, it may be necessary to apply a ``pulse desensitization correction factor'' (PDCF) to the measured value, pursuant to 47 CFR 15.35(a). It has come to our attention that some test laboratories and manufacturers are either not aware of, or are not applying the PDCF when required. Test laboratories and manufacturers of devices using pulse emissions are reminded to include in the test report the true peak level of the emission when the limit is specified in terms of a peak emission,
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- Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Before the Federal Communications Commission Washington, D.C. 20554 In the Matter of SafeView, Inc. Request for Waiver of Sections 15.31 and 15.35 of the Commission's Rules to Permit the Deployment of Security Screening Portal Devices that Operate in the 24.25-30 GHz Range ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ET Docket No. 04-373 ORDER Adopted: August 3, 2006 Released: August 4, 2006 By the Acting Chief, Office of Engineering and Technology: Introduction By this action, we are granting the Request
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- emissions X S.1340 Sharing between feeder links for the mobile-satellite service and the aeronautical radionavigation service in the Earth-to-space direction in the band 15.4-15.7 GHz X S.1341 Sharing between feeder links for the mobile-satellite service and the aeronautical radionavigation service in the space-to-Earth direction in the band 15.4-15.7 GHz and the protection of the radio astronomy service in the band 15.35-15.4 GHz X S.1428-1 Reference FSS earth-station radiation patterns for use in interference assessment involving non-GSO satellites in frequency bands between 10.7 GHz and 30 GHz X BO.1443-1 Reference BSS earth station antenna patterns for use in interference assessment involving non-GSO satellites in frequency bands covered by RR Appendix 30 X S.1586 Calculation of unwanted emission levels produced by a non-geostationary
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- 6.22 52 FinanceandInsurance 241,120 13.4868.04 7.91 10.57 53 RealEstate,Rental,Leasing 266,161 18.7557.93 14.31 9.01 54 Prof.,ScientiÖc,Tech.Svcs. 727,893 18.3268.91 8.72 4.04 55 Mgmt.ofCompanies 28,351 7.4048.84 4.96 38.80 56 Admin.Support,Waste Mgmt.,RemediationService 305,462 19.8261.50 13.69 4.99 61 EducationalServices 65,251 24.3525.82 11.53 38.30 62 HealthCare&SocialAssist. 564,299 20.5759.33 6.62 13.48 71 Arts,Entertainment,Recreation 103,824 16.2047.91 12.26 23.64 72 Accommodation&FoodSvcs. 434,441 20.0555.24 19.75 4.96 81 OtherServices(exceptpublic) 392,656 21.8559.04 15.35 3.76 AllNon-FarmBusinesses 5,524,563 16.5063.64 12.89 6.97 17 Table8:OwnershipbyRace(IncludingPublicFirms) Percent NAICSName HispanicWhiteBlackAmIndAsian 22 Utilities 0.39 44.38 0.52 0.41 0.66 23 Construction 3.45 93.98 1.20 0.66 1.01 31-33 Manufacturing 3.33 88.19 0.67 0.45 3.81 42 WholesaleTrade 3.58 85.31 0.56 0.23 7.07 44-45 RetailTrade 3.47 86.28 1.18 0.40 8.27 48-49 Transportation&Warehousing 5.29 88.82 2.82 0.51 1.98 51 Information 2.48 81.84 1.82 0.35 3.81
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- Radio astronomy 5.149 5.504A 14.47-14.5 Fixed Mobile US203 US342 14.47-14.5 FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) NG183 Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space) US203 US342 14.5-14.8 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.510 MOBILE Space research 14.5-14.7145 FIXED Mobile Space research 14.5-14.8 14.7145-14.8 MOBILE Fixed Space research 14.8-15.35 FIXED MOBILE Space research 14.8-15.1365 MOBILE SPACE RESEARCH Fixed US310 14.8-15.1365 US310 5.339 15.1365-15.35 FIXED SPACE RESEARCH Mobile 5.339 US211 15.1365-15.35 5.339 US211 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY SPACE RESEARCH (passive) 5.340 5.511 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY US74 SPACE RESEARCH (passive) US246 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511D 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260 US211 Aviation (87) 15.43-15.63 FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.511A AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511C 15.43-15.63 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260 5.511C US211 US359 15.43-15.63 FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260 5.511C US211 US359 Satellite Communications (25) Aviation (87)
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- that the Applicants did not include in their analysis possible foreign ownership of Motorola, Inc., which will hold up to 0.46 percent equity and voting interests in GHQ and, in turn, in Iridium Holdings.135Even if we were to treat the entire 0.46 percent amount as foreign-owned, the maximum indirect foreign equity and voting interests attributable to these investors would be 15.35 percent an amount well within the 25 percent allowance in the 2002 Iridium Orderfor additional indirect foreign ownership of Iridium Carrier Services. We find that these foreign ownership interests complywith the conditions of the 2002 ruling and are otherwise consistent with the Commission's foreign ownership policies established in the Foreign 129Narrative at 15. 130June 2, 2009 Letter at Attachment A.
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- Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Before the Federal Communications Commission Washington, D.C. 20554 In the Matter of SafeView, Inc. Request for Waiver of Sections 15.31 and 15.35 of the Commission's Rules to Permit the Deployment of Security Screening Portal Devices that Operate in the 24.25-30 GHz Range ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ET Docket No. 04-373 ORDER Adopted: September 2, 2009 Released: September 2, 2009 By the Chief, Office of Engineering and Technology: By this Order, we grant the request for extension of
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- Section 15.253(b)(1) requires that the output be reduced to 200 nw/cm2 at 3 meters (average) and 20,000 nW/cm2 (peak) when the vehicle is not in motion. These correspond to EIRP levels of 23.5 dBm (average) and 43.5 dBm (peak). See 47 C.F.R. §§ 15.253(b)(2). The limits in this section are expressed in terms of average values. See 47 C.F.R. § 15.35(b). In addition, there is a peak limit of 20 dB above the average limit. See C.F.R. §§ 15.253(d) and 15.35(b). See First Report and Order and Second Further Notice of Proposed Rule Making in ET Docket No. 94-124, 11 FCC Rcd 4481, 4490 (1995). See Public Notice, DA 09-842. SARA's members manufacture and operate vehicle-based radars in the 76-77 GHz
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- by § 2.925 and other relevant sections in this chapter [emphasis added]. In addition, Section 15.239(b) of the Rules provides that: The field strength of any emissions within the permitted 200 kHz band shall not exceed 250 microvolts/meter at 3 meters. The emission limit in this paragraph is based on measurement instrumentation employing an average detector. The provisions in § 15.35 for limiting peak emissions apply. Power 7 admits that it manufactured 66,750 FM Cup Transmitters and shipped them to Macally between March 29, 2007 and April 12, 2008; that those devices were uncertified; and that all FM Cup Transmitters shipped between March and October 2007 were non-compliant with the emissions limit of 15.239(b) of the Rules. We find, therefore, that
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- a primary radiolocation service in the band 15.4-15.7 GHz will provide additional spectrum for new advanced radar systems with increased image resolution and increased range accuracy that require wider emission bandwidths than currently available. Operation of radiolocation radars in this band must not adversely affect other co-primary services in the band or the radio astronomy service in the adjacent band 15.35-15.40 GHz. BACKGROUND: The band 15.4-15.7 GHz is allocated on a primary basis to the aeronautical radionavigation service (ARNS). There are no ICAO-standard ARNS systems currently operating in this band. While the ARNS is a safety service as delineated in No. 4.10 of the Radio Regulations, radiolocation services have demonstrated compatible operations with radionavigation radars in other frequency bands over many
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- that use short pulses of radio frequency (``RF'') energy to measure the level of materials in enclosed storage tanks and at outdoor sites. Ohmart/VEGA requests that the Commission permit certification of LPR devices under Section 15.252. Ohmart/VEGA states that its devices will comply with the average power limits in Section 15.209, but will exceed the peak power limits in Section 15.35(b) of the rules. It also submits proposed measurement procedures for both open-air and in-tank compliance testing of its LPR devices with applicable requirements of Part 15. The Commission's Office of Engineering and Technology (``OET'') is reviewing Ohmart/VEGA's waiver request. OET has concluded that in order to develop a complete record on the complex issues presented by this request, it will
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- 14.4-14.47 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.457A 5.457B 5.484A 5.506 5.506B 5.ZZZ MOBILE except aeronautical mobile Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space) 5.504B 5.506A 5.509A Space research (space-to-Earth) 5.504A 14.47-14.5 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.457A 5.457B 5.484A 5.506 5.506B 5.ZZZ MOBILE except aeronautical mobile Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space) 5.504B 5.506A 5.509A Radio astronomy 5.149 5.504A 14.5-14.8 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.510 MOBILE Space research 14.8-15.35 FIXED MOBILE Space research 5.339 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY SPACE RESEARCH (passive) 5.340 5.511 8 15.4-18.4 GHz Allocation to services Region 1 Region 2 Region 3 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511D 15.43-15.63 FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.511A AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511C 15.63-15.7 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511D 15.7-16.6 RADIOLOCATION 5.512 5.513 16.6-17.1 RADIOLOCATION Space research (deep space) (Earth-to-space) 5.512 5.513 17.1-17.2 RADIOLOCATION 5.512 5.513 17.2-17.3 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (active) RADIOLOCATION SPACE
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- 14.4-14.47 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.457A 5.457B 5.484A 5.506 5.506B 5.ZZZ MOBILE except aeronautical mobile Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space) 5.504B 5.506A 5.509A Space research (space-to-Earth) 5.504A 14.47-14.5 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.457A 5.457B 5.484A 5.506 5.506B 5.ZZZ MOBILE except aeronautical mobile Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space) 5.504B 5.506A 5.509A Radio astronomy 5.149 5.504A 14.5-14.8 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.510 MOBILE Space research 14.8-15.35 FIXED MOBILE Space research 5.339 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY SPACE RESEARCH (passive) 5.340 5.511 18520 15.4-18.4 GHz Allocation to services Region 1 Region 2 Region 3 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511D 15.43-15.63 FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.511A AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511C 15.63-15.7 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511D 15.7-16.6 RADIOLOCATION 5.512 5.513 16.6-17.1 RADIOLOCATION Space research (deep space) (Earth-to-space) 5.512 5.513 17.1-17.2 RADIOLOCATION 5.512 5.513 17.2-17.3 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (active) RADIOLOCATION SPACE
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- S.1340 Sharing between feeder links for the mobile-satellite service and the aeronautical radionavigation service in the Earth-to-space direction in the band 15.4-15.7 GHz No. 5.511C 357 S.1341 Sharing between feeder links for the mobile-satellite service and the aeronautical radionavigation service in the space-to-Earth direction in the band 15.4-15.7 GHz and the protection of the radio astronomy service in the band 15.35-15.4 GHz No. 5.511A 373 S.1428-1 Reference FSS earth-station radiation patterns for use in interference assessment involving non-GSO satellites in frequency bands between 10.7 GHz and 30 GHz Article 22 Table 22-1A (and 22.5C.6), Table 22- 1B (and 22.5C.6), Table 22-1C (and 22.5C.6) 387 BO.1443-2 (Annex 1) Reference BSS earth station antenna patterns for use in interference assessment involving non-GSO satellites
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- subject to the following conditions: The ProVision 100 imaging device shall be certified by the Commission and must comply with the technical specifications applicable to operation under Part 15 of 47 C.F.R. However, for this particular swept-frequency device, compliance with the average power level need not be demonstrated under the requirement of 47 C.F.R. § 15.31(c) and the requirement of §15.35(b) is relaxed to allow a total radiated peak power level up to 41 dB above the maximum permitted average power when measured as specified herein. The intentional emissions generated by the ProVision 100 imaging device must be completely contained within the 24.25 to 30 GHz frequency range. All installations of ProVision 100 imaging devices operated under this waiver shall be
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- Chief, Office of Engineering and Technology Public Notice, December 29, 2005, DA 05-3339. See Octatron, Inc. and Chang Industry, Inc. Request for Waiver (``Waiver Request''), filed November 28, 2005; see also Octatron/Chang Amendment to Request for Waiver (``Amendment''), filed February 15, 2007. Id. See 47 C.F.R. § 15.249. See 47 C.F.R. §§ 15.249(a) and (c); see also 47 C.F.R. § 15.35(a). 47 C.F.R. § 15.247. See Octatron/Chang Waiver Request at 2. Octatron/Chang's surveillance systems are wide-band devices that have been designed to operate in the 915 MHz band with 3.5 megahertz-wide channels. See Octatron/Chang Reply Comments, filed February 14, 2006, at 6. See 47 C.F.R. § 2.106 See 47 C.F.R. § 2.106, US218. See 47 C.F.R. § 2.106, US275. See 47
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- Radio astronomy 5.149 5.504A 14.47-14.5 Fixed Mobile US203 US342 14.47-14.5 FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) NG183 NG187 Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space) US203 US342 14.5-14.8 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.510 MOBILE Space research 14.5-14.7145 FIXED Mobile Space research 14.5-14.8 14.7145-14.8 MOBILE Fixed Space research 14.8-15.35 FIXED MOBILE Space research 14.8-15.1365 MOBILE SPACE RESEARCH Fixed US310 14.8-15.1365 5.339 15.1365-15.35 FIXED SPACE RESEARCH Mobile 5.339 US211 15.1365-15.35 5.339 US211 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY SPACE RESEARCH (passive) 5.340 5.511 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY US74 SPACE RESEARCH (passive) US246 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511D 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260 US211 Aviation (87) 15.43-15.63 FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.511A AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511C 15.43-15.63 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260 5.511C US211 US359 15.43-15.63 FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260 5.511C US211 US359 Satellite Communications (25) Aviation (87)
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- to the following conditions: 1). The ProVision 100 imaging device shall be certified by the Commission and must comply with the technical specifications applicable to operation under Part 15 of 47 C.F.R. However, for this particular swept-frequency device, compliance with the average power level need not be demonstrated under the requirement of 47 C.F.R. § 15.31(c) and the requirement of §15.35(b) is relaxed to allow a total radiated peak power level up to 41 dB above the maximum permitted average power when measured as specified herein. 2). The intentional emissions generated by the ProVision 100 imaging device must be completely contained within the 24.25 to 30 GHz frequency range. 3). All installations of ProVision 100 imaging devices operated under this waiver
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- in kHz) divided by (the center frequency of the device in MHz) microvolts/meter at a distance of 30 meters, whichever is the higher level. For the purposes of this section, bandwidth is determined at the points 6 dB down from the modulated carrier. The emissions in this paragraph are based on measurement instrumentation employing an average detector. The provisions in §15.35(b) for limiting peak emissions apply.'' The Argus II would not be allowed to operate at the 100 µV/m emission limit of this section because the 13 kHz bandwidth of the device is less than 10% of the 3.156 MHz center frequency. We note that the emission limits presented in § 15.209 (a) and §15.223(a) require field strength measurements to be
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- additional bandwidth will provide greater image resolution, improve range accuracy, allow for greater radar density, improve interference performance, lower system costs, and increase ability to collect more information about an object or area observed by a radar. Operation of these radars must not adversely affect other co-primary services in the band, or the radio astronomy service in the adjacent band, 15.35-15.40 GHz. This proposal also takes into account the need for an allocation in the range 15.4-15.6 GHz to address the requirements of mobile-satellite service systems under WRC-12 Agenda item 1.25. A separate, complimentary proposal under Agenda item 1.25 makes the allocation to the mobile-satellite service in the range 15.4-15.6 GHz. Note: This proposal represents a compromise approach between agenda items
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- additional bandwidth will provide greater image resolution, improve range accuracy, allow for greater radar density, improve interference performance, lower system costs, and increase ability to collect more information about an object or area observed by a radar. Operation of these radars must not adversely affect other co-primary services in the band, or the radio astronomy service in the adjacent band, 15.35-15.40 GHz. This proposal also takes into account the need for an allocation in the range 15.4-15.6 GHz to address the requirements of mobile-satellite service systems under WRC-12 Agenda item 1.25. A separate, complimentary proposal under Agenda item 1.25 makes the allocation to the mobile-satellite service in the range 15.4-15.6 GHz. Note: This proposal represents a compromise approach between agenda items
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- 19.28 19.79 45 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Eastern (NJ & PA) 11.71 12.32 13.98 16.12 14.87 17.42 17.36 14.59 20.87 25.62 46 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Midwest (MO, KS, MN, NE, WY, TX) 19.97 19.66 17.69 18.88 Central Telephone of Texas 26/ 14.94 16.19 18.39 21.81 21.58 United Telephone - Midwest (MO, KS, MN, NE, WY, TX) 14.57 15.35 13.92 17.44 19.64 21.52 47 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - North Carolina 16.54 12.55 15.92 22.23 Central Telephone of North Carolina 11.29 11.97 14.19 15.36 15.75 Carolina Telephone And Telegraph Company 11.43 10.14 11.10 15.39 17.77 15.38 48 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Northwest 17.27 17.72 19.39 29.32 34.17 34.55 30.59 32.54 31.86 32.77 49 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. -
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- NEW LISBON TEL. CO., INC. 11.07 -2.98 14.48 73.25 320797 C NEW PARIS TEL., INC. -0.58 -0.49 -0.09 -12.36 320800 C NORTHWESTERN INDIANA TEL. CO., INC. 2.93 0.00 2.93 -8.18 320801 C CENTURYTEL OF ODON, INC. 10.45 1.56 8.76 14.94 320807 C PERRY-SPENCER RURAL TEL. COOP., INC. 2.34 -2.71 5.19 4.33 320809 A COMM. CORP. OF SOUTHERN INDIANA 6.23 -7.91 15.35 58.87 3 - 258 Table 3.32 High-Cost Loop Support Data Percentage Changes from 2002 to 2003 by Study Area Study Area Code Type Study Area Name Requirement Loops per Loop Later Year* NTS Revenue of Requirement Projections in Unseparated High-Cost Loop Unseparated Number NTS Revenue Support Payment INDIANA Cont. 320813 A>CPULASKI-WHITE RURAL TEL. COOP., INC. 4.85 -6.19 11.77 20.81 320815
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- NEW LISBON TEL. CO., INC. 11.07 -2.98 14.48 73.25 320797 C NEW PARIS TEL., INC. -0.58 -0.49 -0.09 -12.36 320800 C NORTHWESTERN INDIANA TEL. CO., INC. 2.93 0.00 2.93 -8.18 320801 C CENTURYTEL OF ODON, INC. 10.45 1.56 8.76 14.94 320807 C PERRY-SPENCER RURAL TEL. COOP., INC. 2.34 -2.71 5.19 4.33 320809 A COMM. CORP. OF SOUTHERN INDIANA 6.23 -7.91 15.35 58.87 3 - 258 Table 3.32 High-Cost Loop Support Data Percentage Changes from 2002 to 2003 by Study Area Study Area Code Type Study Area Name Requirement Loops per Loop Later Year* NTS Revenue of Requirement Projections in Unseparated High-Cost Loop Unseparated Number NTS Revenue Support Payment INDIANA Cont. 320813 A>CPULASKI-WHITE RURAL TEL. COOP., INC. 4.85 -6.19 11.77 20.81 320815
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- 5.61 0.00 613018 C NUSHAGAK ELECTRIC & TELEPHONE COOP., INC. 0.08 0.87 -0.79 -4.69 613019 C OTZ TELEPHONE COOPERATIVE, INC. 4.23 -8.03 13.33 17.53 613020 C ACS - NORTHLAND SITKA -2.43 -3.20 0.80 -10.45 613022 C ACS - ALASKA GREATLAND 4.83 -5.04 10.40 0.00 613023 C UNITED UTILITIES INC. -6.88 0.22 -7.08 -25.36 613023A C UNITED UTILITIES INC. 2.61 -11.05 15.35 784.27 613025 C YUKON TELEPHONE COMPANY, INC. 18.68 2.37 15.94 37.87 613026 A NORTH COUNTRY TELEPHONE COMPANY 19.51 9.57 9.06 31.56 613028 C SUMMIT TEL & TEL CO OF ALASKA 0.84 4.00 -3.04 -0.33 AMERICAN SAMOA TOTAL -6.46 1.06 -7.44 -51.22 673900 C AMERICAN SAMOA TELECOMMUNICATIONS AUTHORITY -6.46 1.06 -7.44 -51.22 ARIZONA TOTAL -3.62 -6.12 2.66 14.29 452169 C SAN
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- 5.61 0.00 613018 C NUSHAGAK ELECTRIC & TELEPHONE COOP., INC. 0.08 0.87 -0.79 -4.69 613019 C OTZ TELEPHONE COOPERATIVE, INC. 4.23 -8.03 13.33 17.53 613020 C ACS - NORTHLAND SITKA -2.43 -3.20 0.80 -10.45 613022 C ACS - ALASKA GREATLAND 4.83 -5.04 10.40 0.00 613023 C UNITED UTILITIES INC. -6.88 0.22 -7.08 -25.36 613023A C UNITED UTILITIES INC. 2.61 -11.05 15.35 784.27 613025 C YUKON TELEPHONE COMPANY, INC. 18.68 2.37 15.94 37.87 613026 A NORTH COUNTRY TELEPHONE COMPANY 19.51 9.57 9.06 31.56 613028 C SUMMIT TEL & TEL CO OF ALASKA 0.84 4.00 -3.04 -0.33 AMERICAN SAMOA TOTAL -6.46 1.06 -7.44 -51.22 673900 C AMERICAN SAMOA TELECOMMUNICATIONS AUTHORITY -6.46 1.06 -7.44 -51.22 ARIZONA TOTAL -3.62 -6.12 2.66 14.29 452169 C SAN
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- Based at Spanish Fork-Springville airport in Spanish Fork, UT; operating in he area surrounding Elberta, UT WF2XGA LOCKHEED MARTIN CORPORATION 0452-EX-PL-2009 New experimental to operate on 9800 MHz for testing, verification and integration of the ELTA EL/M-2032 radar. Fixed: Ft. Worth (Tarrant), TX WF2XEP LOCKHEED MARTIN CORPORATION 0370-EX-PL-2009 New experimental to operate in 14400 - 14830 MHz and 15.15 - 15.35 GHz for transmission of surveillance and reconnaissance imagery data from an airborne platform to a ground control station. Mobile: Waterton (Arapahoe), CO; Goodyear (Maricopa), AZ WF2XFB RAYTHEON NCS 0393-EX-PL-2009 New experimental to operate in 14400 - 14925 MHz and 15150 - 15350 MHz to test and verify Over-the-Air Data Link interoperability between the CDL-N surface terminal and a simulated CDL-N
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- to operate in 2535-2540 MHz to conduct a WiMax network research project. Mobile: Brooklyn (Kings), NY WF2XIX LOCKHEED MARTIN CORPORATION 0153-EX-PL-2010 New experimental to operate on 9600 MHz to test SAR radar. Fixed & Mobile: Goodyear (Maricopa), AZ WF2XJH BAE SYSTEMS INFORMATION AND ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS INTEGRATION INC. 0150-EX-PL-2010 New experimental to operate in 14.40 - 14.85 GHz and 15.15 - 15.35 GHz for testing a robust and reliable microwave data link for manned and unmanned vehicles. Mobile: Temporary fixed ground-based operations, Greenlawn, NY WF2XJF RAYTHEON COMPANY 0127-EX-PL-2010 New experimental to operate in 34 - 38 GHz for testing of the multi-function radio frequency system (MFRFS) compact high gain active phase array radar. Fixed & Mobile: Tucson, (Pima), AZ; Redstone Arsenal (Madison),
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- to operate in 2110 - 2155 MHz for testing LTE picocells. Fixed & Mobile: Santa Ana (Orange), CA WF2XUH ETS TECHNOLOGIES, INC. 0237-EX-PL-2011 New experimental to operate in 3700-4200 MHz for testing 4G backhaul. Fixed: San Jose (Santa Clara), CA WF2XTX THE BOEING COMPANY 0160-EX-PL-2011 New experimental to operate in 4400 - 4999, 5251 - 5850 MHz and 14.40 - 15.35 GHz for demonstration of local control of an airborne pod. Mobile St. Charles, MO WF2XTF KONGSBERG SEATEX AS 0137-EX-PL-2011 New experimental to operate in 5220 - 5240 MHz to Test Two Way Broadband Mobile Radio. Mobile: Pelican Island [Galveston], TX WF2XUC LOCKHEED MARTIN CORPORATION 0194-EX-PL-2011 New experimental to operate on 8.70 and 16.70 GHz for ground-to-air testing of ASARS-2. Mobile:
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- requirements for wireless E911 services to account for new wireless services and improved technology. Most recently, in July 2011, the Commission adopted an item that strengthens the existing E911 location accuracy regime, proposes measures to improve 911 availability and location determination for users of interconnected VoIP services and seeks additional public input on issues associated with 19 Amendment of Sections 15.35 and 15.253 of the Commission's Rules Regarding Operation of Radar Systems in the 76-77 GHz Band, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 26 FCC Rcd 8107 (2011). 20 Elimination of Part 23 of the Commission's Rules, Report and Order, 25 FCC Rcd 541 (2010). 15 The Federal Communications Commission | November 7, 2011 Preliminary Plan for Retrospective Analysis of Existing Rules extending
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- (Cumberland), NC WF2XWB MOTOROLA SOLUTIONS, INC. 0337-EX-PL-2011 New experimental to operate in 758 - 768 MHz and 788 - 798 MHz to test LTE technology. Fixed & Mobile: Schaumburg, IL; Palatine, IL; Rolling Meadows, IL WF2XUI BAE SYSTEMS INFORMATION AND ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS INTEGRATION INC. 0223-EX-PL-2011 New experimental to operate in 880 - 915 MHz, 1710 - 1785 and 15.15 - 15.35 GHz for testing an in flight calibration and verification of a radio direction finding system on an unmanned aircraft. Mobile: Victorville, CA WF2XUS SENSIS CORPORATION 0267-EX-PL-2011 New experimental to operate in 895 - 942 MHz for radar system testing Fixed: Manlius (Onondaga), NY WF2XXG WAL-MART STORES, INC. 0355-EX-PL-2011 New experimental to operate in 902 - 928 MHz for RFID testing.
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- 0030-EX-PL-2012 New experimental to operate in 3100-3500 MHz for tests and demonstrations of newly-designed equipment being developed for sale to the U.S. military. Fixed: Linthicum and Hanover (Anne Arundel), MD WG2XAX BAE SYSTEMS INFORMATION AND ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS INTEGRATION INC. 0630-EX-PL-2011 New experimental to operate in 4400 - 4990 MHz, 14.50 - 14.602 GHz, 14.61 - 15.242 GHz and 15.25 - 15.35 GHz for testing antennas. Mobile: Temporary Fixed (Ground), Merrimack, NH WG2XAP RAYTHEON NETWORK CENTRIC SYSTEMS 0626-EX-PL-2011 New experimental to operate in 4900 - 4990 MHz for testing a mobile surveillance system Fixed & Mobile: La Cruces (Dona Ana), NM WG2XBP CBF NETWORKS 0019-EX-PL-2012 New experimental to operate in 5250 - 5350 MHz and 5725 - 5875 MHz for equipment testing.
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- Report and Order, 27 FCC Rcd 2650 (2012). Reporting Requirements for U.S. Providers of International Telecommunications Services; Amendment of Part 43 of the Commission's Rules, First Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 26 FCC Rcd 7274 (2011); see also Comments of Verizon and Verizon Wireless, GC Docket No. 11-199, at 9 (Feb. 8, 2012). Amendment of Sections 15.35 and 15.253 of the Commission's Rules Regarding Operation of Radar Systems in the 76-77 GHz Band, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 26 FCC Rcd 8107 (2011). Elimination of Part 23 of the Commission's Rules, Report and Order, 25 FCC Rcd 541 (2010). Amending the Definition of Interconnected VoIP Service in Section 9.3 of the Commission's Rules, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, Third
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- meteorological studies. Fixed: Irvine and Pacoima, CA WG2XDG THE BOEING COMPANY 0091-EX-PL-2012 New experimental to operate in 2400 - 2483 MHz for demonstration control of multi-UAV. Fixed & Mobile: Flight level of 11,000 MSL feet, Boardman (Morrow), OR WG2XCZ BAE SYSTEMS INFORMATION AND ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS INTEGRATION INC. 0058-EX-PL-2012 New experimental to operate in 4400 - 4990 MHz and 14.50 - 15.35 GHz for testing antennas. Mobile: Temporary Fixed (Ground), Litchfield, NH WG2XAF LOCKHEED MARTIN CORPORAITON 0606-EX-PL-2011 New experimental to operate on select frequencies between 4410 MHz and 4930 MHz for testing of the sniper targeting POD Mobile: Fort Worth (Tarrant), TX; Possum Kingdom Lake (Pala Pinto), TX; Fort Sill, Lawton (Comanche), OK WG2XDA GENERAL DYNAMICS C4 SYSTEMS 0070-EX-PL-2012 New experimental to
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- to wideband receivers used in the licensed radio services. In the case of the first definition of peak level, i.e., the peak signal strength measured over a 50 MHz bandwidth, we propose to apply a 20 dB limit with respect to the maximum permitted average emission level. This limit is consistent with the limit currently contained in 47 C.F.R. § 15.35(b). We further propose that the absolute peak limit for the emission over its entire bandwidth be variable based on the amount the -10 dB bandwidth of the UWB emission exceeds 50 MHz. We propose to use the following formula to calculate the amount that the absolute peak emission level over the entire bandwidth of the UWB emission would be permitted
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- GHz (SHF) Page 67 International Table United States Table FCC Rule Part(s) Region 1 Region 2 Region 3 Federal Government Non-Federal Government 14.5-14.8 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) S5.510 MOBILE Space research 14.5-14.7145 FIXED Mobile Space research 14.5-15.1365 14.7145-15.1365 MOBILE Fixed Space research US310 14.7145-15.1365 US310 14.8-15.35 FIXED MOBILE Space research 15.1365-15.35 FIXED Mobile Space research S5.339 US211 15.1365-15.35 S5.339 US211 S5.339 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY SPACE RESEARCH (passive) S5.340 S5.511 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY US74 SPACE RESEARCH (passive) US246 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION S5.511D 15.4-15.7 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260 Aviation (87) 15.43-15.63 FIXED SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) (Earth-to-space) S5.511A AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION S5.511C 15.63-15.7 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION S5.511D 733 797 US211 15.7-16.6 RADIOLOCATION S5.512 S5.513 15.7-16.6 RADIOLOCATION US110 G59 15.7-17.2 Radiolocation US110 16.6-17.1 RADIOLOCATION
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- delivered by a transmitter to the antenna of a fixed service station is limited to -26 dB(W/MHz). * * * * * UNITED STATES (US) FOOTNOTES * * * * * US246 No station shall be authorized to transmit in the following bands: 608-614 MHz, except for medical telemetry equipment1, 1400-1427 MHz, 1660.5-1668.4 MHz, 2690-2700 MHz, 4990-5000 MHz, 10.68-10.7 GHz, 15.35-15.4 GHz, 23.6-24 GHz, 31.3-31.8 GHz, 50.2-50.4 GHz, 52.6-54.25 GHz, 86-92 GHz, 100-102 GHz, 105-116 GHz, 164-168 GHz, 182-185 GHz, 217-231 GHz. * * * * * US263 In the bands 21.2-21.4 GHz, 22.21-22.5 GHz, 36-37 GHz, 56.26-58.2 GHz, 116-126 GHz, 150-151 GHz, 174.5-176.5 GHz, 200-202 GHz, and 235-238 GHz, the space research and the Earth exploration-satellite services shall not receive
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- this section shall be digital data devices and not be used for voice communications. (b) The field strength of any emissions radiated within the specified frequency band shall not exceed 11,000 microvolts per meter measured at a distance of 3 meters. The emission limit in this paragraph is based on measurement instrumentation employing an average detector. The provisions in § 15.35 for limiting peak emissions apply. Additionally, devices authorized under these provisions shall be provided with a means for automatically limiting operation so that the duration of each transmission shall not be greater than 120 seconds and be only permitted to reinitiate an interrogation in the case of a transmission error. Absent such a transmission error, the silent period between transmissions
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- dBi. Alternatively, the main lobe beamwidth must not exceed 3.5 degrees. The beamwidth limit shall apply to both the azimuth and elevation planes. At antenna gains over 33 dBi or beamwidths narrower than 3.5 degrees, power must be reduced to ensure that the field strength does not exceed 2500 millivolts/meter. * * * * * (e) As shown in § 15.35(b), for frequencies above 1000 MHz, the field strength limits in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section are based on average limits. However, the peak field strength of any emission shall not exceed the maximum permitted average limits specified above by more than 20 dB under any condition of modulation. For point-to-point operation under paragraph (b) of this section, the
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- emitting radio frequency energy...in sufficient degree to cause harmful interference to radio communications.'' See 47 U.S.C. § 302(a). Section 302(b) of the Communications Act states that, ``No person shall manufacture, import, sell, offer for sale, or ship devices...which fail to comply with the regulations promulgated pursuant to this section.'' See 47 U.S.C. § 302(b). See 47 C.F.R. §§ 15.109 and 15.35(b). See 47 C.F.R. § 15.35(b). See 47 C.F.R. § 15.5. See 47 C.F.R. § 15.15(a). See 47 C.F.R. § 2.803 for a description of the marketing restrictions for devices subject to Commission authorization. Equipment manufactured in this country solely for export is exempt from compliance with the requirements promulgated under Section 302 of the Communications Act. See 47 U.S.C. §
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- MSS systems. Comments The NGSO MSS parties supported our 15 GHz proposals. CORF requests that the band 15.43-15.63 GHz not be allocated for FSS downlinks because of the potential for unacceptable interference to RAS observations, and, as a result, the likelihood that this FSS downlink allocation would be deleted on an international basis at WRC-2000. CORF stated that the band 15.35-15.4 GHz is one of the most important bands used by the RAS for continuum observations, which define the frequency variation of radiation in sufficient detail to enable conclusions to be reached concerning the physical mechanisms responsible for such emissions. None of the NGSO MSS parties responded to this late-filed request. In its comments to a related proceeding, NTIA requests that
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- GHz (SHF) Page 67 International Table United States Table FCC Rule Part(s) Region 1 Region 2 Region 3 Federal Government Non-Federal Government 14.5-14.8 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.510 MOBILE Space research 14.5-14.7145 FIXED Mobile Space research 14.5-14.7145 14.7145-15.1365 MOBILE Fixed Space research US310 14.7145-15.1365 US310 14.8-15.35 FIXED MOBILE Space research 15.1365-15.35 FIXED Mobile Space research 5.339 US211 15.1365-15.35 5.339 US211 5.339 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY SPACE RESEARCH (passive) 5.340 5.511 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY US74 SPACE RESEARCH (passive) US246 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511D 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260 US211 Aviation (87) 15.43-15.63 FIXED SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.511A AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511C 15.43-15.63 AERONAUTICAL RADIO- NAVIGATION US260 5.511C US211 US359 15.43-15.63 FIXED SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) AERONAUTICAL RADIO- NAVIGATION US260 5.511C US211 US359 Satellite
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- wideband receivers used in the licensed radio services. In the case of the first definition of peak level, i.e., the peak signal strength measured over a 50 MHz bandwidth, the Commission proposed to apply a 20 dB limit with respect to the maximum permitted average emission level. This limit is consistent with the limit currently contained in 47 C.F.R. § 15.35(b). It also proposed that the absolute peak limit for the emission over its entire bandwidth be variable based on the amount the -10 dB bandwidth of the UWB emission exceeds 50 MHz. The Commission proposed to use the following formula to calculate the amount that the absolute peak emission level over the entire bandwidth of the UWB emission would be
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- and wind speed, ice thickness, and the sensing of various atmospheric gasses. NASA claims that passive sensors are very sensitive to any microwave energy in their measurement bandwidth. See 47 C.F.R. §§ 15.249 and 15.245. See Notice of Proposed Rule Making in WT Docket No. 02-146, 17 FCC Rcd 12182 (2002). See 47 C.F.R. § 15.231. See 47 C.F.R. § 15.35(c). See Notice at p.18211. Id.. Id.. Id. See ADEMCO comments at 2, Cisco comments at 5, Enalasys comments at 2, Interlogix comments at 2, ITI comments at 8-9, JCI comments at 2, Lifeline comments at 2, Linear comments at 4, and Mattel comments at 1. See Enalasys comments at 2. See JCI comments at 2. See ADEMCO comments at 2.
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- GHz (SHF) Page 67 International Table United States Table FCC Rule Part(s) Region 1 Region 2 Region 3 Federal Government Non-Federal Government 14.5-14.8 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.510 MOBILE Space research 14.5-14.7145 FIXED Mobile Space research 14.5-14.7145 14.7145-15.1365 MOBILE Fixed Space research US310 14.7145-15.1365 US310 14.8-15.35 FIXED MOBILE Space research 15.1365-15.35 FIXED Mobile Space research 5.339 US211 15.1365-15.35 5.339 US211 5.339 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY SPACE RESEARCH (passive) 5.340 5.511 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY US74 SPACE RESEARCH (passive) US246 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511D 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260 US211 Aviation (87) 15.43-15.63 FIXED SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.511A AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511C 15.43-15.63 AERONAUTICAL RADIO- NAVIGATION US260 5.511C US211 US359 15.43-15.63 FIXED SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) AERONAUTICAL RADIO- NAVIGATION US260 5.511C US211 US359 Satellite
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- (passive) 56.9-57 EARTH EXPLORATION- SATELLITE (passive) FIXED INTER-SATELLITE G128 MOBILE 5.558 56.9-57 EARTH EXPLORATION- SATELLITE (passive) FIXED MOBILE 5.558 * * * * * INTERNATIONAL FOOTNOTES * * * * * 5.340 All emissions are prohibited in the following bands: 1400-1427 MHz, 2690-2700 MHz, except those provided for by No. 5.422, 10.68-10.7 GHz, except those provided for by No. 5.483, 15.35-15.4 GHz, except those provided for by No. 5.511, 23.6-24 GHz, 31.3-31.5 GHz, 31.5-31.8 GHz, in Region 2, 48.94-49.04 GHz, from airborne stations, 50.2-50.4 GHz2, 52.6-54.25 GHz, 86-92 GHz, 100-102 GHz, 109.5-111.8 GHz, 114.25-116 GHz, 148.5-151.5 GHz, 164-167 GHz, 182-185 GHz, 190-191.8 GHz, 200-209 GHz, 226-231.5 GHz, 250-252 GHz. 2 5.340.1 The allocation to the earth exploration-satellite service (passive) and the
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- not marketed a device containing a software vulnerability that was publicly known, or known to the manufacturer, at the time of marketing. Vanu Inc. Comment, at 2 November 19, 2003. See 47 C.F.R. § 2.803. See 47 C.F.R. §§ 15.247 and 15.249. See 47 C.F.R. §§ 15.205 and 25.202. See 47 C.F.R. § 2.915(a)(1). See 47 C.F.R. §§ 15.31 through 15.35. These sections specify general testing procedures applicable to unlicensed transmitters. In addition, some industry procedures such as the ANSI C63.4 procedure for measuring emissions from intentional and unintentional radiators are incorporated by reference into the rules. See 47 C.F.R. §§ 2.1046 through 2.1060. This technology has been referred to as ``heteromorphic waveforms''. above. See 5 U.S.C. § 603. The RFA,
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- that precluded the operation of UWB devices included a requirement to apply a PDCF, a prohibition against operation within the restricted bands, and a prohibition against damped wave emissions. Further, the requirement to apply a PDCF is contained in the instructions on how to operate a spectrum analyzer to measure pulsed emissions. The rule cited by MSSI, 47 C.F.R. § 15.35(b), requires the use of a 1 MHz resolution bandwidth to measure the peak emission level. However, the PDCF must be applied to that measured value if the conditions specified in HP Application Note 150-2 are met. MSSI is incorrect in its assertion that an incomplete statement contained in the Public Notice announcing the issuance of a waiver overturns the discussions
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- RADIONAVIGATION-SATELLITE 5.554 US211 US342 265-275 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) MOBILE RADIO ASTRONOMY 5.149 5.563A 265-275 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) MOBILE RADIO ASTRONOMY 5.563A US342 275-1000 (Not allocated) 5.565 275-1000 * * * * * UNITED STATES (US) FOOTNOTES * * * * * US74 In the bands 25.55-25.67, 73.0-74.6, 406.1-410.0, 608-614, 1400-1427, 1660.5-1670.0, 2690-2700, and 4990-5000 MHz and in the bands 10.68-10.7, 15.35-15.4, 23.6-24.0, 31.3-31.5, 86-92, 100-102, 109.5-111.8, 114.25-116, 148.5-151.5, 164-167, 200-209, and 250-252, the radio astronomy service shall be protected from extraband radiation only to the extent that such radiation exceeds the level which would be present if the offending station were operating in compliance with technical standards or criteria applicable to the service in which it operates. Radio astronomy observations in
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- 1645.5 - 1646.5 1660 - 1710 1718.8 - 1722.2 2200 - 2300 2483.5 - 2500 2655 - 2900 3260 - 3267 3332 - 3339 3345.8 - 3358 3600 - 3650 3700 - 4400 4.5 - 5.15 5.35 - 5.46 7.25 - 7.75 8.025 - 8.5 9.0 - 9.2 9.3 - 9.5 10.6 - 12.7 13.25 - 13.4 14.47 - 14.5 15.35 - 16.2 17.7 - 21.4 22.01 - 23.12 23.6 - 24.0 31.2 - 31.8 36.43 - 36.5 (2) 1 Until February 1, 1999, this restricted band shall be 0.490-0.510 MHz. 2 Above 38.6 * * * * * 3. A new Section 15.252 is proposed to be added to read as follows: § 15.252 Operation within the band 3.65-3.70 GHz.
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- note 56. See Shure comments at 9 and Shure reply comments at 2-6. See 47 C.F.R. §§ 74802(a) and 74.861(e). See 47 C.F.R. § 15.247(c). See 47 C.F.R. § 15.209. See 47 C.F.R. § 15.209(b). See Notice of Proposed Rule Making and Order in ET Docket No. 03-108, 18 FCC Rcd 26859 (2003). Id. See 47 C.F.R. § 15.31 through 15.35. See Notice of Proposed Rule Making and Order in ET Docket No. 03-108, 18 FCC Rcd 26859 (2003). See Report and Order in ET Docket No. 03-122, 18 FCC Rcd 24484 (2003). See 47 C.F.R. §§ 15.201(b) and 2.960. See Report and Order in ET Docket No. 98-68, 13 FCC Rcd 24687 (1999). Id. See First Report and Order in
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- RADIONAVIGATION-SATELLITE 5.554 US211 US342 265-275 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) MOBILE RADIO ASTRONOMY 5.149 5.563A 265-275 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) MOBILE RADIO ASTRONOMY 5.563A US342 275-1000 (Not allocated) 5.565 275-1000 * * * * * UNITED STATES (US) FOOTNOTES * * * * * US74 In the bands 25.55-25.67, 73.0-74.6, 406.1-410.0, 608-614, 1400-1427, 1660.5-1670.0, 2690-2700, and 4990-5000 MHz and in the bands 10.68-10.7, 15.35-15.4, 23.6-24.0, 31.3-31.5, 86-92, 100-102, 109.5-111.8, 114.25-116, 148.5-151.5, 164-167, 200-209, and 250-252 GHz, the radio astronomy service shall be protected from extraband radiation only to the extent that such radiation exceeds the level which would be present if the offending station were operating in compliance with technical standards or criteria applicable to the service in which it operates. Radio astronomy observations
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- uplink and downlink transmissions. Measurements should be made at a test site where the ambient signal level is 6 dB below the applicable limit. (See ANSI C63.4-2003, section 5.1.2 for alternatives, if this test condition cannot be achieved.) If the data communications burst rate is at least 20 burst per second, quasi-peak measurements shall be employed, as specified in Section 15.35(a). If the data communications burst rate is 20 bursts per second or less, measurements shall be made using a peak detector. For frequencies above 30 MHz, an electric field sensing antenna, such as a biconical antenna is used. The signal shall be maximized for antenna heights from 1 to 4 meters, for both horizontal and vertical polarizations, in accordance to
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- the resolution bandwidth. The level obtained from the spectrum analyzer measurement of the peak emission can be considerably increased by the addition of the PDCF to obtain the true peak emission level. This standard was implemented when Part 15 devices primarily employed narrowband emissions. Throughout this proceeding, the Commission recognized that the peak emission limit specified in 47 C.F.R. § 15.35(b) was established based on the operation of narrowband transmission systems and may unfairly penalize some wideband operations, effectively prohibiting the operation of these devices. Indeed, the Commission noted that the existing limit on the total peak power level is not well suited to measure the operation of, or represent the interference potential of, transmitters that employ extremely wide bandwidths. It
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- for uplink and downlink transmissions. Measurements should be made at a test site where the ambient signal level is 6 dB below the applicable limit. (See ANSI C63.4-2001, section 5.1.2 for alternatives, if this test condition cannot be achieved.) The data communications burst rate shall be at least 20 Hz as specified in the note at the end of Section 15.35(a) for Quasi-Peak measurements. Otherwise, measurements shall be made using a peak detector. For frequencies above 30 MHz, an electric field sensing antenna, such as a biconical antenna is used. The signal shall be maximized for antenna heights from 1 to 4 meters, for both horizontal and vertical polarizations, in accordance to ANSI C63.4-2001 procedures. For frequencies below 30 MHz, an
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- the preceding paragraph, except that the segment 14.8-15.1365 MHz is allocated to the fixed service on a secondary basis and the segment 15.1365-15.35 GHz is allocated to the mobile service on a secondary basis. Footnote US211 states that, in the band 15.1365-15.35 GHz, applicants for airborne or space station assignments are urged to protect RAS observations in the adjacent band 15.35-15.4 GHz from harmful interference. The principle SRS use of the band 14.8-15.35 GHz is by NASA's Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System (TDRSS), which is a communication signal relay system that provides tracking and data acquisition services between low earth orbiting (LEO) spacecraft and NASA/customer control and/or data processing facilities. In the segment 15.2-15.35 GHz, NASA operates spacecraft VLBI phase
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- was removed in the Second Report and Order in this proceeding. The rules previously limited periodic transmissions to a single transmission of not more than one second per hour. This rule was changed in the Second Report and Order to allow multiple transmissions not to exceed a total duration of two seconds per hour. See 47 C.F.R. §§ 15.231(b)(2) and 15.35(b). See 47 C.F.R. § 15.231(e). Id. Id. See 47 C.F.R. § 15.231(b). See Savi petition for rule making dated November 22, 2000, RM-10051. See Notice at 18214. See Interlogix comments at 6, Mattel comments at 2, Savi comments at 3-5 and VYTEK comments at 1-2. See Interlogix comments at 6. See Interlogix comments at 6. See VYTEK comments at 1-2.
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- Radio astronomy 5.149 5.504A 14.47-14.5 Fixed Mobile US203 US342 14.47-14.5 FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) NG183 Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space) US203 US342 14.5-14.8 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.510 MOBILE Space research 14.5-14.7145 FIXED Mobile Space research 14.5-14.8 14.7145-14.8 MOBILE Fixed Space research 14.8-15.35 FIXED MOBILE Space research 14.8-15.1365 MOBILE SPACE RESEARCH Fixed US310 14.8-15.1365 US310 15.1365-15.35 FIXED SPACE RESEARCH Mobile 5.339 US211 15.1365-15.35 5.339 US211 5.339 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY SPACE RESEARCH (passive) 5.340 5.511 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY US74 SPACE RESEARCH (passive) US246 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511D 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260 US211 Aviation (87) 15.43-15.63 FIXED SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.511A AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511C 15.43-15.63 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260 5.511C US211 US359 15.43-15.63 FIXED SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260 5.511C US211 US359 Satellite Communications (25)
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- VHF TV frequencies (100 microvolts per meter at a distance of three meters). We expect that the same out-of-band emission limits would be appropriate if the Commission were to adopt a licensed approach for TV band devices. In such case, the out-of-band emission limits would be specified in the appropriate rule part rather than Part 15. See 47 C.F.R. § 15.35(a). CISPR is an acronym for the French name for the Special International Committee on Radio Interference. See NAB and MSTV reply comments at 14, Consumer Electronics Association reply comments at 6, Consumer Electronics Association comments at 10, and National Cable and Telecommunications Association comments at 5. See NAB and MSTV reply comments at 10, Qualcomm reply comments at 6 See
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- is amended as follows: Revise page 48. In the list of United States (US) Footnotes, add footnote US402. In the list of Non-Federal Government (NG) Footnotes, revise footnotes NG163 and NG167. In the list of Federal Government (G) Footnotes, revise footnote G117. The revisions and additions read as follows: § 2.106 Table of Frequency Allocations. * * * * * 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY SPACE RESEARCH (passive) 5.340 5.511 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY US74 SPACE RESEARCH (passive) US246 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511D 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260 US211 Aviation (87) 15.43-15.63 FIXED SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.511A AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.511C 15.43-15.63 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260 5.511C US211 US359 15.43-15.63 FIXED SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260 5.511C US211 US359 Satellite Communications (25)
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- mW (0.001 watt) final collector current. The transmitter shall be designed to meet or exceed the specifications of Part 15, specifically including 15.249. Id. at 4-5. Id. at 1-2. Id. (citing 47 C.F.R. § 95.419(c)). Id. Id. at 5-6. Id. at 8-10. Id. at 5-6. Id. at 2, 8-10. Id. at 8. Id. Id. at 9-10. See 47 C.F.R. § 15.35. See 47 C.F.R. §§ 15.227, 15.229, 15.235, 15.249. See www.bluetooth.com for further information. 47 C.F.R. § 95.416. 47 C.F.R. § 95.183(a)(14). 47 C.F.R. § 95.7(a). 47 C.F.R. § 95.191(b). 47 C.F.R. §§ 95.413(a)(6), (7). See 47 C.F.R. § 95.607. See 47 C.F.R. § 2.932. 47 C.F.R. § 95.413(a)(9). See In the Matter of Amendment of Part 19 Citizens Radio Service,
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- sharing environment in the CB Service are still timely and appropriate. Below we will review various rules for the CB Service and seek comment on whether the rules are needed, effective, enforceable, and make sense for this Personal Radio Service. 123Id. at 8-10. 124Id. at 5-6. 125Id. at 2, 8-10. 126Id. at 8. 127Id. 128Id. at 9-10. 129See47 C.F.R. § 15.35. 130See47 C.F.R. §§ 15.227, 15.229, 15.235, 15.249. 131Seewww.bluetooth.com for further information. 7671 Federal Communications Commission FCC 10-106 55.We note that section95.416 (CBRule16) provides that CB communications must be limited to the minimum practical time, that each CB station must limit its conversations to no more than five continuous minutes, and that after each conversation, CB stations must not transmit again
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- Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Before the Federal Communications Commission Washington, D.C. 20554 In the Matter of SafeView, Inc. Request for Waiver of Sections 15.31 and 15.35 of the Commission's Rules to Permit the Deployment of Security Screening Portal Devices that Operate in the 24.25-30 GHz Range ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ET Docket No. 04-373 MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Adopted: January 14, 2010 Released: January 20, 2010 By the Commission: Introduction By this action, the Commission denies in part and grants in
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- to comply with our existing average radiated emissions limit for devices operating above 960 MHz, i.e., 500 µV/m or the equivalent of -41.3 dBm/MHz EIRP, as measured at 3 meters. Further, we are requiring that TLPR devices mandated and operated under the waiver meet all Part 15 requirements, except for Section 15.205(a), including the 20 dB peak-to-average requirement of Section 15.35(b) which is also a controlling factor on peak emissions. We note that Siemens suggests that we require in-situ compliance measurements of its TLPR device over the 40-250 GHz frequency band, which is at variance with our rules. As noted above, the Part 15 rules require measurements of the transmitter from the lowest frequency generated within the device up to the
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- uplink and downlink transmissions. Measurements should be made at a test site where the ambient signal level is 6 dB below the applicable limit. (See ANSI C63.4-2003, section 5.1.2 for alternatives, if this test condition cannot be achieved.) If the data communications burst rate is at least 20 burst per second, quasi-peak measurements shall be employed, as specified in Section 15.35(a) of the rules. If the data communications burst rate is 20 bursts per second or less, measurements shall be made using a peak detector. For frequencies above 30 MHz, an electric field sensing antenna, such as a biconical antenna is used. The signal shall be maximized for antenna heights from 1 to 4 meters, for both horizontal and vertical polarizations,
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-11-185A1.doc http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-11-185A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-11-185A1.txt
- See TLPR NPRM, 25 FCC Rcd at 601 ¶ 2. See also note 12, supra, regarding the prospective use of SRR for vehicle radar systems in the United States. See Appendix A, infra. See 47 C.F.R. Part 15. The Trex FOD detection equipment operates with a transmit power of one hundred milliwatts. See Petition at 11. See Amendment of Sections 15.35 and 15.253 of the Commission's Rules Regarding Operation of Radar Systems in the 76-77 GHz Band, Notice of Proposed Rule Making, ET Docket No. 10-28, 26 FCC Rcd 8107, 8114 ¶ 18 (2011). See Ex Parte Notice in ET Docket 10-28 of XSight Systems, Ltd. dated January 13, 2011. The Commission previously recognized the importance to aviation safety of monitoring
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-11-185A1_Rcd.pdf
- interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation.23Do these restrictions make Part 15 operation unworkable for FOD detection?24 12.Interference mitigation measures. With respect to potential interference to radio astronomy operations, Trex proposes a detailed procedure for coordinating radiolocation operations in the 78-81 GHz band with radio astronomy service (RAS) observatories.25We believe that Trex's proposal, which 19See Amendment of Sections 15.35 and 15.253 of the Commission's Rules Regarding Operation of Radar Systems in the 76-77 GHz Band, Notice of Proposed Rule Making, ET Docket No. 10-28, 26 FCC Rcd 8107, 8114 ¶ 18 (2011). 20SeeEx ParteNotice in ET Docket 10-28 of XSight Systems, Ltd. dated January 13, 2011. 21The Commission previously recognized the importance to aviation safety of monitoring the movement
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-11-79A1.doc http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-11-79A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-11-79A1.txt
- Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Before the Federal Communications Commission Washington, D.C. 20554 In the Matter of Amendment of Sections 15.35 and 15.253 of the Commission's Rules Regarding Operation of Radar Systems in the 76-77 GHz Band. Amendment of Section 15.253 of the Commission's Rules to Permit Fixed Use of Radar in the 76-77 GHz Band. ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ET Docket No. 11-90 RM-11555 ET Docket No. 10-28 Notice of Proposed Rule Making Adopted:
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-12-34A1.doc http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-12-34A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-12-34A1.txt
- be installed inside tanks with high attenuation characteristics, e.g., steel or concrete, pending the conclusion of the concurrently initiated rulemaking. To date, the Commission has authorized LPR devices primarily for use in tanks upon demonstration of compliance with Section 15.209 of the rules, which specifies an average EIRP limit of -41.3 dBm for operations above 960 MHz. In addition, Section 15.35(b) of the rules sets a peak limit at 20 dB above the average limit, e.g., a peak EIRP limit of -21.3 dBm. For pulsed signals, it may be necessary to take into account the limitations of the measurement instrumentation to determine the total peak power level, through the use of a pulse desensitization correction factor (PDCF), which is an adjustment
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-98-208A1.doc http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-98-208A1.pdf
- calculated in 47 CFR § 2.202, and the definition of unwanted emissions, consisting of out-of-band emissions and spurious emissions, is contained in 47 CFR § 2.1. See the measurement procedure specified in 47 CFR § 15.31(a)(6). This procedure references the use of HP Application Note 150-2 which specifies the use of a pulse desensitization correction factor. See 47 CFR §§ 15.35(b) and 15.209. Because ultra-wideband systems normally have a low duty cycle, the peak levels are quite high compared to the average emission levels. In addition, there have been several applications for grants of equipment authorization and an even greater number of inquiries to the staff to permit these systems. The U.S. Radar system employs different antennas, depending on the specific
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-98-336A1.doc http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-98-336A1.pdf
- (Earth-to-space) MOBILE ELLITE (Earth-to-space) G117 50.4 - 51.4 FIXED LITE (Earth-to-space) MOBILE ELLITE INTERNATIONAL FOOTNOTES * * * * * I. New "S" Numbering Scheme * * * * * S5.340 All emissions are prohibited in the following bands: 1400-1427 MHz, 2690-2700 MHz except those provided for by Nos. S5.421 and S5.422, 10.68-10.7 GHzexcept those provided for by No. S5.483, 15.35-15.4 GHz except those provided for by No. S5.511, 23.6-24 GHz, 31.3-31.5 GHz, 31.5-31.8 GHz in Region 2, 48.94-49.04 GHz from airborne stations, 51.4-54.25 GHz, 58.2-59 GHz, 64-65 GHz, 86-92 GHz, 105-116 GHz, 140.69-140.98 GHzfrom airborne stations and from space stations in the space-to-Earth direction, 182-185 GHz except those provided for by No. S5.563, 217-231 GHz. * * * * *
- http://transition.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Orders/2000/fcc00211.doc http://transition.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Orders/2000/fcc00211.pdf http://transition.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Orders/2000/fcc00211.txt
- MHz band, but the FCC has not yet addressed this footnote. * * * * * UNITED STATES (US) FOOTNOTES * * * * * US246 Except for medical telemetry equipment operating in the band 608-614 MHz, no stations shall be authorized to transmit in the following bands: 608-614 MHz, 1400-1427 MHz, 1660.5-1668.4 MHz, 2690-2700 MHz, 4990-5000 MHz, 10.68-10.70 GHz, 15.35-15.40 GHz, 23.6-24.0 GHz, 31.3-31.8 GHz, 51.4-54.25 GHz, 58.2-59.0 GHz, 64-65 GHz, 86-92 GHz, 100-102 GHz, 105-116 GHz, 164-168 GHz, 182-185 GHz and 217-231 GHz. Medical telemetry equipment shall not cause harmful interference to radio astronomy operations in the band 608-614 MHz and shall be coordinated under the requirements found in 47 C.F.R. § 95.1119. * * * * * US350
- http://transition.fcc.gov/eb/Orders/2009/DA-09-253A1.html
- by S: 2.925 and other relevant sections in this chapter [emphasis added]. In addition, Section 15.239(b) of the Rules provides that: The field strength of any emissions within the permitted 200 kHz band shall not exceed 250 microvolts/meter at 3 meters. The emission limit in this paragraph is based on measurement instrumentation employing an average detector. The provisions in S: 15.35 for limiting peak emissions apply. 6. Power 7 admits that it manufactured 66,750 FM Cup Transmitters and shipped them to Macally between March 29, 2007 and April 12, 2008; that those devices were uncertified; and that all FM Cup Transmitters shipped between March and October 2007 were non-compliant with the emissions limit of 15.239(b) of the Rules. 7. We find,
- http://wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/46/releases/fc020152.pdf http://wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/46/releases/fc020152.txt
- Table of Frequency Allocations, footnotes, US74, US350 and US362 are amended to read as follows: § 2.106 Table of Frequency Allocations. * * * * * UNITED STATES (US) FOOTNOTES * * * * * Federal Communications Commission FCC 02-152 96 US74 In the bands 25.55-25.67, 73.0-74.6, 406.1-410.0, 608-614, 1400-1427, 1660.5-1670.0, 2690-2700 and 4990-5000 MHz and in the bands 10.68-10.7, 15.35-15.4, 23.6-24.0, 31.3-31.5, 86-92, 105-116 and 217-231 GHz, the radio astronomy service shall be protected from extraband radiation only to the extent that such radiation exceeds the level which would be present if the offending station were operating in compliance with the technical standards or criteria applicable to the service in which it operates. Radio astronomy observations in these bands are
- http://wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/data/bandplans/39band.pdf
- 3.3 3.5 3.6 3.65 3.7 4.2 4.4 4.5 4.66 4.685 4.8 4.99 5.0 5.25 5.35 5.46 5.47 5.6 5.65 5.85 5.925 6.425 6.525 6.875 7.075 7.125 7.197.235 7.25 7.30 7.45 7.55 7.75 7.90 8.025 8.175 8.215 8.4 8.45 8.5 9.0 9.2 9.3 9.5 10.0 10.45 10.5 10.5510.6 10.68 10.7 11.7 12.2 12.7 12.75 13.2513.4 14.0 14.2 14.4 14.5 14.7145 15.1365 15.35 15.415.7 16.6 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.717.8 18.6 18.8 19.7 20.2 21.2 21.4 22.022.21 22.5 22.55 23.0 23.55 23.6 24.024.05 24.25 25.25 27.0 27.5 29.5 30.0 ISM 2450.0 ± 50 MHz 30.0 31.0 31.3 31.8 32.0 33.033.4 36.0 37.0 38.6 39.5 40.0 40.5 42.5 43.5 45.5 47.0 47.2 50.2 50.4 51.4 54.25 58.2 59.0 64.0 65.0 66.0 71.0 72.77 72.91
- http://www.fcc.gov/3G/3gfinalreportappendices.doc http://www.fcc.gov/3G/3gfinalreportappendices.pdf
- for its operation. APPENDIX 6.3 TABLE OF FREQUENCY ALLOCATION FOOTNOTES 792A The use of the bands 4500-4800 MHz, 6725-7025 MHz, 10.7-10.95 GHz, 11.2-11.45 GHz and 12.75-13.25 GHz by the fixed-satellite service shall be in accordance with the provisions of Appendix 30B. US74 In the bands 25.55-25.67, 73.0-74.6, 406.1-410.0, 608-614, 1400-1427, 1660.5-1670.0, 2690-2700 and 4990-5000 MHz and in the bands 10.68-10.7, 15.35-15.4, 23.6-24.0, 31.3-31.5, 86-92, 105-116 and 217-231 GHz, the radio astronomy service shall be protected from extraband radiation only to the extent that such radiation exceeds the level which would be present if the offending station were operating in compliance with the technical standards or criteria applicable to the service in which it operates. US203 Radio astronomy observations of the formaldehyde
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/IAD/ref05.pdf
- 30.29 18.08 0.05 33.83 3.45 South Carolina Beaufort Sprint 23.80 15.65 0.12 32.30 4.00 Tennessee Memphis BellSouth 23.08 14.38 0.06 41.50 5.50 Tennessee Nashville BellSouth 22.41 14.13 0.06 41.50 5.50 Texas Brownsville SBC 19.13 13.83 0.08 38.35 4.95 Texas Corpus Christi SBC 20.48 15.18 0.08 38.35 4.95 Texas Dallas SBC 23.14 16.71 0.08 38.35 4.95 Texas Fort Worth SBC 21.49 15.35 0.08 38.35 4.95 Texas Houston SBC 21.92 15.57 0.08 38.35 4.95 Texas San Antonio SBC 19.71 14.05 0.08 38.35 4.95 Utah Logan Qwest 21.41 19.34 0.10 25.00 4.75 Virginia Richmond Verizon 31.43 24.64 0.19 38.50 1.25 Virginia Smithfield Verizon 30.59 21.80 0.16 40.00 2.50 Washington Everett Verizon 24.49 17.83 0.02 43.25 3.95 Washington Seattle Qwest 21.33 17.44 0.07 31.00 4.75
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/IAD/ror00.pdf
- 45 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Eastern (NJ & PA) 25.62 20.87 14.59 17.36 17.42 14.87 16.12 13.98 12.32 11.71 46 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Midwest (MO, KS, MN, NE, WY, TX) 18.88 17.69 19.66 19.97 Central Telephone of Texas 21.58 21.81 18.39 16.19 14.94 United Telephone - Midwest (MO, KS, MN, NE, WY, TX) 21.52 19.64 17.44 13.92 15.35 14.57 47 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - North Carolina 22.23 15.92 12.55 16.54 Central Telephone of North Carolina 15.75 15.36 14.19 11.97 11.29 Carolina Telephone And Telegraph Company 15.38 17.77 15.39 11.10 10.14 11.43 48 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Northwest 32.77 31.86 32.54 30.59 34.55 34.17 29.32 19.39 17.72 17.27 49 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Southeast (TN, VA
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/IAD/ror96.pdf
- 10.98 17.95 54.49 18.54 18.20 81ALLTEL ILLINOIS, INC. 11.94 12.86 5.18 10.81 14.33 11.79 82ANCHORAGE TELEPHONE UTILITY 12.62 11.78 9.31 13.88 62.30 8.07 13.84 83AYSHIRE FARMERS MUTUAL TELEPHONE COMPANY 8.76 12.07 (7.66) 4.96 21.81 7.81 84BACA VALLEY TELEPHONE COMPANY 11.96 12.08 13.83 9.85 17.90 11.62 85BAY SPRINGS TELEPHONE COMPANY, INC. 2/ 11.92 12.39 6.16 11.24 10.95 11.13 86BOURBEUSE TELEPHONE COMPANY 15.35 12.11 68.34 21.63 21.63 87CINCINNATI BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY 14.07 12.61 12.78 14.55 53.75 18.33 16.46 88CITIZENS TELEPHONE COMPANY 11.19 4.95 70.24 15.56 12.05 14.43 89EAST ASCENSION TELEPHONE CO. 10.96 12.30 5.19 17.73 (0.12) 9.59 90EL PASO TELEPHONE COMPANY 14.92 12.07 12.02 21.84 19.53 21.47 91ELKHART TELEPHONE COMPANY 13.61 11.32 7.92 19.98 6.86 14.92 92FIDELITY TELEPHONE COMPANY 12.31 12.11 0.88 21.47
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/IAD/ror97.pdf
- INDIANA, INC. 26.13 24.30 20.33 18.41 15.55 14.93 14.06 63 UNITED TELEPHONE - EASTERN (NJ & PA) 17.36 17.42 14.87 16.12 13.98 12.32 11.71 64 UNITED TELEPHONE CO. OF OHIO 13.17 16.12 15.93 16.54 13.15 12.33 12.75 65 UNITED TELEPHONE CO. OF THE NORTHWEST 30.59 34.55 34.17 29.32 19.39 17.72 17.27 66 UNITED TELEPHONE-MIDWEST (MO,KS,MN,NE,WY,TX) 15.50 21.52 19.64 17.44 13.92 15.35 14.57 67 UNITED TELEPHONE - SOUTHEAST (TN, VA & SC) 18.89 20.66 19.05 19.17 13.39 13.48 13.66 ALL OTHER COMPANIES 68 ALIANT COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY 20/ 21/ 12.27 14.95 16.09 15.47 14.95 12.36 69 CINCINNATI BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY 22/ 20.04 70 CITIZENS TELECOMMUNICATIONS COS. (TARIFF 1) 23/ 10.31 15.42 71 CITIZENS TELECOMMUNICATIONS COS. (TARIFF 2) 23/ 13.19 13.58 72 FRONTIER TELEPHONE
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/IAD/ror98.pdf
- 14.66 11.44 UNITED TELEPHONE CO. OF FLORIDA 19.79 19.28 17.63 14.44 12.27 13.00 58 SPRINT LOCAL TELEPHONE COS. - EASTERN (NJ & PA) 14.59 17.36 17.42 14.87 16.12 13.98 12.32 11.71 59 SPRINT LOCAL TELEPHONE COS. - MIDWEST (MO,KS,MN,NE,WY,TX) 19.63 19.97 CENTRAL TELEPHONE OF TEXAS 19/ 21.58 21.81 18.39 16.19 14.94 UNITED TELEPHONE - MIDWEST (MO,KS,MN,NE,WY,TX) 21.52 19.64 17.44 13.92 15.35 14.57 60 SPRINT LOCAL TELEPHONE COS. - NORTH CAROLINA 13.18 16.54 CENTRAL TELEPHONE OF NORTH CAROLINA 19/ 15.75 15.36 14.19 11.97 11.29 CAROLINA TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY 15.38 17.77 15.39 11.10 10.14 11.43 61 SPRINT LOCAL TELEPHONE COS. - NORTHWEST 30.80 30.59 34.55 34.17 29.32 19.39 17.72 17.27 62 SPRINT LOCAL TELEPHONE COS. - SOUTHEAST (TN, VA & SC) 15.87
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/IAD/ror99.pdf
- United Telephone Co. of Florida 19.79 19.28 17.63 14.44 12.27 13.00 57 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Eastern (NJ & PA) 20.88 14.59 17.36 17.42 14.87 16.12 13.98 12.32 11.71 58 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Midwest (MO,KS,MN,NE,WY,TX) 17.83 19.66 19.97 Central Telephone of Texas 23/ 21.58 21.81 18.39 16.19 14.94 United Telephone - Midwest (MO,KS,MN,NE,WY,TX) 21.52 19.64 17.44 13.92 15.35 14.57 59 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - North Carolina 16.04 12.55 16.54 Central Telephone of North Carolina 23/ 15.75 15.36 14.19 11.97 11.29 Carolina Telephone And Telegraph Company 15.38 17.77 15.39 11.10 10.14 11.43 60 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Northwest 29.92 32.54 30.59 34.55 34.17 29.32 19.39 17.72 17.27 61 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Southeast (TN, VA &
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/IAD/trend100.pdf
- 14.66 11.44 United Telephone Co. of Florida 19.79 19.28 17.63 14.44 12.27 13.00 58 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Eastern (NJ & PA) 14.59 17.36 17.42 14.87 16.12 13.98 12.32 11.71 59 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Midwest (MO,KS,MN,NE,WY,TX) 19.63 19.97 Central Telephone of Texas 23/ 21.58 21.81 18.39 16.19 14.94 United Telephone - Midwest (MO,KS,MN,NE,WY,TX) 21.52 19.64 17.44 13.92 15.35 14.57 60 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - North Carolina 13.18 16.54 Central Telephone of North Carolina 23/ 15.75 15.36 14.19 11.97 11.29 Carolina Telephone And Telegraph Company 15.38 17.77 15.39 11.10 10.14 11.43 61 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Northwest 30.80 30.59 34.55 34.17 29.32 19.39 17.72 17.27 62 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Southeast (TN, VA & SC) 15.87
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/IAD/trend199.pdf
- INDIANA, INC. 26.13 24.30 20.33 18.41 15.55 14.93 14.06 63 UNITED TELEPHONE - EASTERN (NJ & PA) 17.36 17.42 14.87 16.12 13.98 12.32 11.71 64 UNITED TELEPHONE CO. OF OHIO 13.17 16.12 15.93 16.54 13.15 12.33 12.75 65 UNITED TELEPHONE CO. OF THE NORTHWEST 30.59 34.55 34.17 29.32 19.39 17.72 17.27 66 UNITED TELEPHONE-MIDWEST (MO,KS,MN,NE,WY,TX) 15.50 21.52 19.64 17.44 13.92 15.35 14.57 67 UNITED TELEPHONE - SOUTHEAST (TN, VA & SC) 18.89 20.66 19.05 19.17 13.39 13.48 13.66 ALL OTHER COMPANIES 68 ALIANT COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY 20/ 21/ 12.27 14.95 16.09 15.47 14.95 12.36 69 CINCINNATI BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY 22/ 20.04 70 CITIZENS TELECOMMUNICATIONS COS. (TARIFF 1) 23/ 10.31 15.42 71 CITIZENS TELECOMMUNICATIONS COS. (TARIFF 2) 23/ 13.19 13.58 72 FRONTIER TELEPHONE
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/IAD/trend200.pdf
- United Telephone Co. of Florida 19.79 19.28 17.63 14.44 12.27 13.00 57 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Eastern (NJ & PA) 20.88 14.59 17.36 17.42 14.87 16.12 13.98 12.32 11.71 58 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Midwest (MO,KS,MN,NE,WY,TX) 17.83 19.66 19.97 Central Telephone of Texas 23/ 21.58 21.81 18.39 16.19 14.94 United Telephone - Midwest (MO,KS,MN,NE,WY,TX) 21.52 19.64 17.44 13.92 15.35 14.57 59 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - North Carolina 16.04 12.55 16.54 Central Telephone of North Carolina 23/ 15.75 15.36 14.19 11.97 11.29 Carolina Telephone And Telegraph Company 15.38 17.77 15.39 11.10 10.14 11.43 60 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Northwest 29.92 32.54 30.59 34.55 34.17 29.32 19.39 17.72 17.27 61 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Southeast (TN, VA &
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/IAD/trend298.pdf
- INDIANA, INC. 26.13 24.30 20.33 18.41 15.55 14.93 14.06 63 UNITED TELEPHONE - EASTERN (NJ & PA) 17.36 17.42 14.87 16.12 13.98 12.32 11.71 64 UNITED TELEPHONE CO. OF OHIO 13.17 16.12 15.93 16.54 13.15 12.33 12.75 65 UNITED TELEPHONE CO. OF THE NORTHWEST 30.59 34.55 34.17 29.32 19.39 17.72 17.27 66 UNITED TELEPHONE-MIDWEST (MO,KS,MN,NE,WY,TX) 15.50 21.52 19.64 17.44 13.92 15.35 14.57 67 UNITED TELEPHONE - SOUTHEAST (TN, VA & SC) 18.89 20.66 19.05 19.17 13.39 13.48 13.66 ALL OTHER COMPANIES 68 ALIANT COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY 20/ 21/ 12.27 14.95 16.09 15.47 14.95 12.36 69 CINCINNATI BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY 22/ 20.04 70 CITIZENS TELECOMMUNICATIONS COS. (TARIFF 1) 23/ 10.31 15.42 71 CITIZENS TELECOMMUNICATIONS COS. (TARIFF 2) 23/ 13.19 13.58 72 FRONTIER TELEPHONE
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/IAD/trend299.pdf
- 14.66 11.44 United Telephone Co. of Florida 19.79 19.28 17.63 14.44 12.27 13.00 58 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Eastern (NJ & PA) 14.59 17.36 17.42 14.87 16.12 13.98 12.32 11.71 59 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Midwest (MO,KS,MN,NE,WY,TX) 19.63 19.97 Central Telephone of Texas 23/ 21.58 21.81 18.39 16.19 14.94 United Telephone - Midwest (MO,KS,MN,NE,WY,TX) 21.52 19.64 17.44 13.92 15.35 14.57 60 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - North Carolina 13.18 16.54 Central Telephone of North Carolina 23/ 15.75 15.36 14.19 11.97 11.29 Carolina Telephone And Telegraph Company 15.38 17.77 15.39 11.10 10.14 11.43 61 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Northwest 30.80 30.59 34.55 34.17 29.32 19.39 17.72 17.27 62 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Southeast (TN, VA & SC) 15.87
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/IAD/trend801.pdf
- 19.28 19.79 45 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Eastern (NJ & PA) 11.71 12.32 13.98 16.12 14.87 17.42 17.36 14.59 20.87 25.62 46 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Midwest (MO, KS, MN, NE, WY, TX) 19.97 19.66 17.69 18.88 Central Telephone of Texas 26/ 14.94 16.19 18.39 21.81 21.58 United Telephone - Midwest (MO, KS, MN, NE, WY, TX) 14.57 15.35 13.92 17.44 19.64 21.52 47 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - North Carolina 16.54 12.55 15.92 22.23 Central Telephone of North Carolina 11.29 11.97 14.19 15.36 15.75 Carolina Telephone And Telegraph Company 11.43 10.14 11.10 15.39 17.77 15.38 48 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. - Northwest 17.27 17.72 19.39 29.32 34.17 34.55 30.59 32.54 31.86 32.77 49 Sprint Local Telephone Cos. -
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/Monitor/mr03-3.pdf
- C ACS OF FAIRBANKS, INC. -8.07 4.70 -12.20 -55.74 613010 C ACS - NORTHLAND GLACIER STATE 4.28 2.56 1.68 1.73 613011 C INTERIOR TELEPHONE COMPANY INC. 11.69 9.51 2.00 10.73 613011A C INTERIOR TELEPHONE COMPANY INC. (ATEAC) Exchanges acquired from 611449 ATEAC, INC. 613012 C ACS - ALASKA JUNEAU 12.42 0.58 11.78 0.00 613013 C KETCHIKAN PUBLIC UTILITIES 10.95 -3.81 15.35 45.58 613015 C MATANUSKA TELEPHONE ASSOC., INC. 5.40 2.97 2.36 3.62 613016 C MUKLUK TEL. COMPANY, INC. 23.73 2.92 20.21 32.99 613016A C MUKLUK TEL. COMPANY, INC. (ATEAC) Exchanges acquired from 611449 ATEAC, INC. 613017 C ALASKA TELEPHONE COMPANY 12.51 0.41 12.06 28.64 613017A C ALASKA TEL CO (611449 ATEAC + 613001A,613011A,613016A,613023A) 138.36 3.45 130.42 INFINITE 613018 C NUSHAGAK ELECTRIC
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/Monitor/mr04-3.pdf
- 0.00 6.50 8.33 351112 A BREDA TEL. COOP. -1.91 -7.37 5.90 2.38 351113 A BROOKLYN MUTUAL TEL. CO. 10.99 -0.06 11.06 INFINITE 351114 A THE BURT TEL. CO. 4.53 -1.48 6.10 10.67 351115 A BUTLER-BREMER MUT. TEL. CO. 8.62 -1.14 9.88 39.51 351118 A CASCADE TEL. CO. 8.15 -1.96 10.31 46.97 351119 A CASEY MUTUAL TEL. CO. 2.22 -5.39 8.04 15.35 351121 A CENTER JUNCTION TEL. CO., INC. 0.99 2.03 -1.02 -7.31 351125 A CENTRAL SCOTT TEL. 10.07 -1.32 11.53 0.00 351126 A CENTURYTEL OF CHESTER, INC. -2.33 -0.91 -1.44 -10.54 351127 C FRONTIER COMMUNICATIONS OF IOWA, INC. -18.35 -2.31 -16.42 0.00 351129 C THE CITIZENS MUTUAL TEL. CO. 4.42 0.29 4.12 4.30 351130 A CLARENCE TEL. CO., INC. 7.82 -2.27
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/Monitor/mrs02-0.pdf
- 6.51 18.04 462203 C THE RYE TELEPHONE CO. INC. 10.78 4.99 5.51 16.25 462204 C COLUMBINE ACQ CORP DBA COLUMBINE TELECOM CO 7.73 8.06 -0.31 9.05 462206 A STONEHAM COOPERATIVE TEL. CO. -8.24 -1.28 -7.05 -14.03 462207 C STRASBURG TEL. CO. 10.60 13.34 -2.42 10.83 462208 C CENTURYTEL OF COLORADO, INC. 0.95 7.93 -6.46 -3.61 462209 C WIGGINS TEL. ASSOC. 15.35 5.79 9.03 50.55 462210 A WILLARD TEL. CO. -0.59 7.94 -7.90 -7.21 465102 C QWEST CORPORATION. - CO (US WEST) 10.32 4.92 5.15 0.00 TOTAL: CONNECTICUT 13.77 4.82 8.54 0.00 132454 A THE WOODBURY TEL. CO. 6.07 4.19 1.81 0.00 135200 C SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND TEL. 13.86 4.83 8.62 0.00 TOTAL: DELAWARE 5.50 2.77 2.66 0.00 565010 C VERIZON DELAWARE
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Notices/2000/fcc00163.doc
- to wideband receivers used in the licensed radio services. In the case of the first definition of peak level, i.e., the peak signal strength measured over a 50 MHz bandwidth, we propose to apply a 20 dB limit with respect to the maximum permitted average emission level. This limit is consistent with the limit currently contained in 47 C.F.R. § 15.35(b). We further propose that the absolute peak limit for the emission over its entire bandwidth be variable based on the amount the -10 dB bandwidth of the UWB emission exceeds 50 MHz. We propose to use the following formula to calculate the amount that the absolute peak emission level over the entire bandwidth of the UWB emission would be permitted
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Orders/1999/da992743.pdf
- GHz (SHF) Page 67 International Table United States Table FCC Rule Part(s) Region 1 Region 2 Region 3 Federal Government Non-Federal Government 14.5-14.8 FIXED FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) S5.510 MOBILE Space research 14.5-14.7145 FIXED Mobile Space research 14.5-15.1365 14.7145-15.1365 MOBILE Fixed Space research 14.7145-15.1365 14.8-15.35 FIXED MOBILE Space research US310 US310 S5.339 15.1365-15.35 FIXED Mobile Space research S5.339 US211 15.1365-15.35 S5.339 US211 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY SPACE RESEARCH (passive) S5.340 S5.511 15.35-15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY US74 SPACE RESEARCH (passive) US246 15.4-15.43 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION S5.511D 15.4-15.7 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260 Aviation (87) 15.43-15.63 FIXED SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) (Earth-to-space) S5.511A AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION S5.511C 15.63-15.7 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION S5.511D 733 797 US211 15.7-16.6 RADIOLOCATION S5.512 S5.513 15.7-16.6 RADIOLOCATION US110 G59 15.7-17.2 Radiolocation US110 Private Land
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Orders/2000/fcc00211.doc http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Orders/2000/fcc00211.pdf http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Orders/2000/fcc00211.txt
- MHz band, but the FCC has not yet addressed this footnote. * * * * * UNITED STATES (US) FOOTNOTES * * * * * US246 Except for medical telemetry equipment operating in the band 608-614 MHz, no stations shall be authorized to transmit in the following bands: 608-614 MHz, 1400-1427 MHz, 1660.5-1668.4 MHz, 2690-2700 MHz, 4990-5000 MHz, 10.68-10.70 GHz, 15.35-15.40 GHz, 23.6-24.0 GHz, 31.3-31.8 GHz, 51.4-54.25 GHz, 58.2-59.0 GHz, 64-65 GHz, 86-92 GHz, 100-102 GHz, 105-116 GHz, 164-168 GHz, 182-185 GHz and 217-231 GHz. Medical telemetry equipment shall not cause harmful interference to radio astronomy operations in the band 608-614 MHz and shall be coordinated under the requirements found in 47 C.F.R. § 95.1119. * * * * * US350
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Public_Notices/2000/da000705.doc
- etc. A pre-amp and a high pass filter are required for this test, in order to provide the measuring system with sufficient sensitivity. Allow the trace to stabilize. The peak reading of the emission, after being corrected by the antenna factor, cable loss, pre-amp gain, etc., is the peak field strength, which must comply with the limit specified in Section 15.35(b). Submit this data. Now set the VBW to 10 Hz, while maintaining all of the other instrument settings. This peak level, once corrected, must comply with the limit specified in Section 15.209. If the dwell time per channel of the hopping signal is less than 100 ms, then the reading obtained with the 10 Hz VBW may be further adjusted
- http://www.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Digest/2009/dd090903.html
- Request without prejudice to refiling. Action by: Deputy Chief, Broadband Division, Wireless Telecommunications Bureau. Adopted: 09/02/2009 by LETTER. (DA No. 09-2010). WTB [46]DA-09-2010A1.doc [47]DA-09-2010A1.pdf [48]DA-09-2010A1.txt * * * * * ADDENDA: THE FOLLOWING ITEMS, RELEASED SEPTEMBER 2, 2009, DID NOT APPEAR IN DIGEST NO. 175: ----------------------------------------------------------------------- --- TEXTS ----------------------------------------------------------------------- --- SAFE VIEW, INC. REQUEST FOR WAIVER OF SECTIONS 15.31 AND 15.35 OF THE COMMISSION'S RULES TO PERMIT THE DEPLOYMENT OF SECURITY SCREENING PORTAL DEVICES THAT OPERATE IN THE 24.25-30 GHZ RANGE. Granted the request for extension of waiver filed by L-3 Communications SafeView, Inc. (Dkt No. 04-373 ). Action by: Chief, Office of Engineering and Technology. Adopted: 09/02/2009 by ORDER. (DA No. 09-1966). OET [49]DA-09-1966A1.doc [50]DA-09-1966A1.pdf [51]DA-09-1966A1.txt References 1. http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-293258A1.doc 2.
- http://www.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Digest/2010/dd100120.html
- Action by: Regional Director, South Central Region, Enforcement Bureau. Adopted: 01/15/2010 by Forfeiture Order. (DA No. 10-90). EB [73]DA-10-90A1.doc [74]DA-10-90A1.pdf [75]DA-10-90A1.txt TELECAST. Dismissed the Telecast application as defective without prejudice to refiling. Action by: Chief, Satellite Engineering Branch, Satellite Division, International Bureau. Adopted: 01/20/2010 by LETTER. (DA No. 10-99). IB [76]DA-10-99A1.doc [77]DA-10-99A1.pdf [78]DA-10-99A1.txt REQUEST FOR WAIVER OF SECTIONS 15.31 AND 15.35 OF THE COMMISSION'S RULES TO PERMIT THE DEPLOYMENT OF SECURITY SCREENING PORTAL DEVICES THAT OPERATE IN THE 24.25-30 GHZ RANGE. Denied in part and granted in part a petition for reconsideration file by FiberTower Corporation. (Dkt No. 04-373 ). Action by: the Commission. Adopted: 01/14/2010 by MO&O. (FCC No. 10-13). OET [79]FCC-10-13A1.doc [80]FCC-10-13A1.pdf [81]FCC-10-13A1.txt AMENDMENT OF PTS. 25, 74, 78
- http://www.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Digest/2011/dd110525.html
- Bureau. Adopted: 05/24/2011 by Order/Consent Decree. (DA No. 11-951). MB [60]DA-11-951A1.doc [61]DA-11-951A2.pdf [62]DA-11-951A1.pdf [63]DA-11-951A1.txt [64]DA-11-951A2.txt POST-TRANSITION TABLE OF DTV ALLOTMENTS, TELEVISION BROADCAST STATIONS, NASHVILLE, TN. Substituted Channel 25 for 5 for WTVF(TV), Nashville, TN. (Dkt No. 11-29 RM-11622 ). Action by: Chief, Video Division, Media Bureau. Adopted: 05/23/2011 by R&O. (DA No. 11-949). MB [65]DA-11-949A1.doc [66]DA-11-949A1.pdf [67]DA-11-949A1.txt AMENDMENT OF SECTIONS 15.35 AND 15.253 OF THE COMMISSION'S RULES REGARDING OPERATION OF RADAR SYSTEMS IN THE 76-77 GHZ BAND/AMENDMENT OF SECTION 15.253 OF THE COMMISSION'S RULES TO PERMIT FIXED USE OF RADAR IN THE 76.77 GHZ BAND. Proposed to modify Sections 15.35 and 15.253 of the rules to enable enhanced vehicular radar technologies in the 76-77 GHz band to improve collision avoidance and
- http://www.fcc.gov/mb/engineering/usallochrt.pdf
- 3.1 3.3 3.5 3.6 3.65 3.7 4.2 4.4 4.5 4.8 4.94 4.99 5.0 5.155.25 5.35 5.46 5.47 5.6 5.65 5.83 5.855.925 6.425 6.525 6.706.875 7.0257.075 7.125 7.197.235 7.25 7.30 7.45 7.55 7.75 7.90 8.025 8.175 8.215 8.4 8.45 8.5 9.0 9.2 9.3 9.5 10.0 10.45 10.5 10.5510.6 10.68 10.7 11.7 12.2 12.7 12.75 13.2513.4 13.75 14.0 14.2 14.4 14.4714.514.7145 15.1365 15.35 15.415.43 15.6315.716.6 17.1 17.217.317.717.818.318.618.8 19.319.7 20.120.221.2 21.422.0 22.2122.5 22.55 23.55 23.6 24.0 24.05 24.2524.45 24.65 24.75 25.05 25.2525.527.0 27.5 29.5 29.9 30.0 ISM 2450.0 ± 50 MHz 30.0 31.0 31.3 31.8 32.032.3 33.033.4 36.0 37.0 37.6 38.0 38.6 39.5 40.0 40.5 41.0 42.5 43.5 45.5 46.9 47.0 47.2 48.2 50.2 50.4 51.4 52.6 54.2555.7856.957.0 58.2 59.0 59.3 64.0 65.0
- http://www.fcc.gov/oet/info/database/spectrum/spinvtbl.pdf
- 14.5 14.7145 C-band / Ku-band (14.4-15.35) IB pt 25 14.5 14.7145 FIXED Mobile Space Research 440 14.7145 14.8 US310 C-band / Ku-band (14.4-15.35) IB pt 25 14.7145 14.8 MOBILE Fixed Space Research US310 204 14.8 15.1365 US310 C-band / Ku-band (14.4-15.35) IB pt 25 14.8 15.1365 MOBILE Fixed Space Research US310 478 15.1365 15.35 339 US211 C-band / Ku-band (14.4-15.35) IB pt 25 15.1365 15.35 FIXED Mobile Space Research 339 US211 208 15.35 15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION- SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY US74 SPACE RESEARCH (passive) US246 15.35 15.4 EARTH EXPLORATION- SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY US74 SPACE RESEARCH (passive) US246 47 15.4 15.7 AERONAUTICAL RADIO- NAVIGATION US260 FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) US211 GSO and/or