You missed the part about the FCC type certification. If you exceed the
limits of the certification, you could also run afoul here as well. So, not
only do you need to confirm the technical aspects, you also need to confirm
the certification, and more often then not, that also involves software these
days.

(I know, I'm going through one right now)

--
Jeff King, [EMAIL PROTECTED] on 01/14/2004


On Wed, 14 Jan 2004 19:40:36 -0800, James Ewing wrote:
>"Unless you  know that the card in question is type-accepted for
>that amount of output  power, and can produce it *cleanly*, then you
>shouldn't be asserting that  it's ok.
>
>And I suspect you *don't*, in fact, know that.
>
>Enough, as  we used to say, "to bet your license on"."
>
>You can read the Broadcom specifications for  the 2050 radio chips
>in the Linksys WRT54G here -
>
>http://www.sveasoft.com/postt48.html
>
>84 mw is well within their design limits.
>
>
>
>




--
general wireless list, a bawug thing <http://www.bawug.org/>
[un]subscribe: http://lists.bawug.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless

Reply via email to