Motherboards and power supplies are tested independent of a case - if it's
in a case, they test it with the all covers removed.  Section 15.32(a).

We may still have an issue, however.  Routerboards are not typical "personal
computers" due to lack of keyboard, video, etc.  So Routerboards and similar
SBCs may never make it as a personal computer.  But VIA boards, and any
NanoITX with video, keyboard, mouse DOES meet the definition of a personal
computer.

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Forrest W. Christian
Sent: Tuesday, June 12, 2007 11:52 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Question posed to the FCC

Doug Ratcliffe wrote:

>It seems to me like having Ubiquiti certified with various WISP antennas
>would be far cheaper than certifying each combination of Routerboard /
>Wireless Card / Case / Antenna combination.
>
That would be correct.  If I understand the regs correctly, what you 
could do is verify the routerboard (and probably the cases) emission 
limits as a computing device, and then certify the Ubiquiti card with 
antennas.  You would also have to do the computing device test on the 
ubiquity card so that it can be integrated into a routerboard enclosure.

-forrest
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