For what it's worth. 

I had a similar problem where I had previously located my 440 machine.  We
were in the top berth of the elevator penthouse, and were asked to move to
the next level below.  (Fortunately this penthouse had two levels.)  Once
all the radio equipment was out of that immediate area - I was not the only
one who had to move - the maintenance people built solid walls and a locked
access door to the elevator equipment room.

In a way, it helped control some of the graphite dust that is inherent in
elevator penthouses.  :-)

Here's a reference I found:
http://www.nfpa.org/assets/files/PDF/ROP/5000rop4.pdf

I did a search for "elevator equipment" and came up with this.  The
references pertain to a separate power supply, etc...  
See the following locations:
Page 491 - Section 23.5.3
Page 521 - Section 25.3.6.3
Pages 528-529 - Section 25.3.6.3

Don't know if that helps, but at least you know you're not alone.

Mark - N9WYS

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Justin W. Pauler
Sent: Wednesday, February 22, 2006 3:39 PM
To: [email protected]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Co-Locating in an Elevator Room

Hello Everyone...

I got some news today regarding my repeater and I'm a little
concerned... I think I'm getting the shaft on this deal.

I signed a lease with a building to place an antenna on the roof and a
repeater and cabinet inside of the elevator room for a said amount of
money. About 6 months ago I completed the install and everything has
been kosher since.

Today I got a call from the Security manager asking me to meet up with
him and the elevator maintenance man regarding a problem with my
equipment. This meeting was very simple, I was asked to remove my
equipment from the elevator room, not because it is causing problems,
but because it has the potential to cause problems.

I was told the following things:

     440 Mhz is "too high" of a frequency to be in an elevator room

     NFPA and the "elevator code" says that nothing can be stored inside
     of an elevator room other than equipment directly relating to the
operation
     of the elevator system

     Even if the unit is "just receiving", it is still building up
"frequency" on the walls
     of the room that will cause "bad things" to happen "eventually".

While normally I would tell this fine maintenance man which door he
could use on his way out, he is pulling rank and telling me that if
the unit stays in the room longer than 1 month, his company will no
longer be able to honor it's service contract with the building.
So.... Sounds like I'm up a creek....

The fact still remains though, I've never heard of NFPA specifying
anything about elevator rooms and I've never heard of an "elevator
code" (but that's not saying it isn't out there). I've also been in
plenty of other elevator rooms in which radio frequency equipment was
housed and transmitting sometimes in excess of 10 times my power with
no issues... Why is this becoming an issue with me?

Any suggestions? Anyone know of a good "waterproof" cabinet that can
go outside? Is that a good idea? Help.

Justin

--
Justin W. Pauler
Baton Rouge, LA






 
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