The folks at the FCC aren't stupid. My *guess* is that they are allowing
some use of the band by commercial operators to gather field data about
what'll really happen when they release the band.
marlon
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jack Unger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "WISPA General List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, March 05, 2007 1:23 PM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] 3650, ok, so what's current status?
Hi John,
The Ubiquitu XR3 spec sheet is misleading. As far as I know, there is no
current legal license-free 3650 operation allowed, as Ubiquity states.
Operation on 3650 can only take place when a Special Temporary
Authorization aplication has been submitted to the FCC and an STA approval
received back from the FCC. In general, STAs in the Experimental Radio
Service are issued to allow on-air testing of equipment or new technology
that can only be tested "on-the-air". Please see my previous post which
outlines the conditions under which an STA may be granted.
Legal, commercial WISP use of 3650 requires not an STA but a non-exclusive
license application process with the FCC. Final requirements are still
being finalized but here's a cut and past from the March 10, 2005
announcement.
______________________________________________________________________________
FCC OPENS ACCESS TO NEW SPECTRUM FOR WIRELESS BROADBAND IN THE 3650 MHZ
BAND
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC or
Commission) adopted rules to open access to new spectrum for wireless
broadband in the 3650-3700 MHz band (3650 MHz). The Commission adopted a
hybrid approach that draws from both the Commission’s unlicensed and
licensed regulatory models and provides for nationwide, non-exclusive
licensing of terrestrial operations in the band utilizing technologies
employing contention-based protocols. This streamlined licensing
mechanism with minimal regulatory entry requirements will encourage
multiple new entrants and stimulate the rapid expansion of wireless
broadband services -- especially in rural America -- by Wireless Internet
Service Providers (WISPs) and other entities with limited resources. The
Commission also provided an opportunity for the introduction at 3650 MHz
of a variety of new wireless broadband technologies, such as Wi-Max, into
the band.
Under the Commission’s approach, there is no limit on the number of
licenses that can be granted, and each licensee will be authorized to
operate on a shared basis with other licensees on all 50 megahertz of the
band, subject to restrictions in geographic areas occupied by
grandfathered Fixed Satellite Service (FSS) and Federal Government
stations. Licensees will also be required to register all system base
stations electronically with the Commission. Base station registration
will enable licensees to locate each other’s operations and will
facilitate protection of grandfathered stations from interference. This
type of licensing and registration will enable the Commission to monitor
the use of this spectrum as new technologies and services develop.
The Commission found that the public record developed in this proceeding
supports multiple users sharing this spectrum through the use of
“contention-based” protocols to minimize interference among fixed and
mobile operations. New fixed and mobile stations will therefore be
required to use contention-based protocols, which will reduce the
possibility of interference from co-frequency operation by managing each
station’s access to spectrum. The Commission concluded that this approach
is a reasonable, cost-effective method for ensuring that multiple users
can access the spectrum.
The Commission gave all licensees the mutual obligation to cooperate and
avoid harmful interference to one another. Mobile stations also will be
required to positively receive and decode an enabling signal transmitted
by a base station. The Commission determined that this approach will
ensure that mobile stations operate within range of registered base
stations, thereby avoiding interference to grandfathered FSS and Federal
Government stations. Fixed stations will be allowed to operate with a
peak power limit of 25 Watts per 25 megahertz bandwidth, and mobile
stations with a peak power limit of 1 Watt per 25 megahertz bandwidth.
The Commission kept the existing allocations for the band, grandfathering
previously licensed primary incumbent FSS earth station operations and
three Federal Government radiolocation stations, entitling them to
interference protection from new wireless licensees. To protect these
incumbent operations, the Commission established circular protection zones
around them – 150 km for FSS earth stations and 80 km for Federal
Government stations - and prohibited new terrestrial licensees from
operating within these zones unless they negotiate agreements with the
incumbents. The Commission determined that new FSS stations should be
allowed on a secondary basis and denied several petitions for
reconsideration of an earlier decision in this proceeding that established
the existing FSS, FS and MS allocations.
The Commission also concluded that there should be no eligibility
restrictions (other than the statutory foreign ownership restrictions) and
no in-band or out-of-band spectrum aggregation limits. Licensees will
receive a 10-year license with the right to renew and will be free to
assign and transfer their non-exclusive nationwide licenses and to assign,
transfer, or share base stations. The initial filing date for the 3650
MHz band licenses will be announced in a future Public Notice. The
licensing and operating provisions for the 3650 MHz band will be located
in Part 90 of the Commission’s rules.
Action by the Commission, March 10, 2005, by Report and Order and
Memorandum Opinion and Order (FCC 05-56). Chairman Powell, Commissioners
Abernathy, Copps, Martin, and Adelstein. Separate statements issued by
Chairman Powell, Commissioners Copps and Adelstein.
FCC Contacts: Gary Thayer, Office of Engineering and Technology, (202)
418-2290, email: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Eli Johnson, Wireless
Telecommunications Bureau, (202) 418-1395, email: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.
ET Docket No. 04-151
WT Docket No. 05-96
ET Docket No. 02-380
ET Docket No. 98-237
_____________________________________________________________________________
Others on this list may be willing to fill you in on more specific details
and/or you can do your own research on the FCC website.
Regards,
jack (still radio-active after 48 years...)
Disclaimer: I am NOT a communications lawyer nor do I play, stand in for,
or represent myself to be a communications lawyer on television. The above
post represents only my current best understanding of FCC regulations.
Please consult with your own communications attorney before transmitting
with equipment or under any conditions which could be in violation of FCC
regulations.
John Valenti wrote:
I heard back from a Ubiquiti salesperson yesterday (working Sunday!),
they expect to start shipping the XR3 cards this month.
http://www.ubnt.com/xtreme_range3.php4
I guess they are claiming that 802.11 is the "contention protocol".
I might check out a pair, we'll see how they are priced. After I finish
with non-commercial WISP testing, I suppose they could be used for
amateur radio projects, since they also support 3300-3500MHz.
On March 3, at 1:57 AM March 3, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Fri, 2 Mar 2007 13:30:38 -0500, Tom DeReggi wrote
3650 is complicated. Last month's FCC visit stated that they are
getting close, and expect answers by Fall :-( Experimental licenses
are available, allthough, would likely result in removing gear in a
year.
Can you point to any info on getting one?
--
Jack Unger ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) - President, Ask-Wi.Com, Inc.
Serving the License-Free Wireless Industry Since 1993
Author of the WISP Handbook - "Deploying License-Free Wireless WANs"
True Vendor-Neutral WISP Consulting-Training-Troubleshooting
Newsletters Downloadable from http://ask-wi.com/newsletters.html
Phone (VoIP Over Broadband Wireless) 818-227-4220 www.ask-wi.com
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