Hi Ralph,

What we do at the university is just using the upper ARFCNs (882-885), because 
the 20MHz LTE the owner of this part of the band use is allowing almost 0.8MHz 
"free" spectrum. THe guard band is designed for high power transmitters, for 
testing we are using 100-200mW Tx power, so we are very far from bleeding into 
the actual used portion of the operator, so we are not creating any 
interference, and we always check the availability of the spectrum with 
analysis.

I think the key for short term low power proejcts is to always check for 
available spectrum, never create any interference, and newer try to mimic a 
commercial operator by using their MCCMNC code and/or the operator name, and if 
your network is out in the air, always make it a closed one and make sure the 
commercial users will be properly reject (with PLMN not allowed reject cause).

Of corse this is not a legal advice, but we are doing so for years now, and 
nobody ever complained :-)

If you check carefully, the law is actually not prohibiting the use of licensed 
portion of the spectrum (eg. interfering), but punishes the possible 
conseqences (loss of revenue, disturbing a public telephony service, someone 
dies because of your interference he/she cannot call the ambulance etc.). Until 
you do not meet any of those circumstances, you will be fine.

Regards,
Csaba

----- Eredeti üzenet -----
Feladó: "Ralph A. Schmid, dk5ras" <[email protected]>
Címzett: "Jacob Erlbeck" <[email protected]>, [email protected]
Elküldött üzenetek: Kedd, 2016. Január 26. 14:32:33
Tárgy: RE: Hardware question

Hi,

> Which EDGE specific (in comparison to GPRS) features do you need?

No specific features, EDGE just would be nice by means of throughput and
latency. I do not intend to set up strange combinations. In case EDGE is not
possible, GPRS will do just fine for demo purposes, too. 

I have such a demo box already, but it is some prototype, development on it
has stopped a time ago, so it is kind of "static". The demo box should not
be updated with all untested features all the time, but no updates at all
are a bit lame :-) Also its 19" form factor is not very portable, and the
transceiver board is somehow bulky, too. I would have built it into a nice
housing if it had a future, but it is a dead end now. 

> Jacob

Ralph.

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