Luis R. Rodriguez wrote:
On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 3:18 PM, Richard Farina <sidhayn@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Luis R. Rodriguez wrote:
On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 02:43:19PM -0800, Richard Farina wrote:
The above frequencies are allowed by FCC part 97 to amateur radio
operator as primary use, this doesn't even cover the secondary and
tertiary uses, just where amateurs are primary.
NACK -- For the US we use the wireless regulatory database for Part 15
rules with 802.11 in mind.
Not only do I understand your reasoning, but I also agree. Please do
consider the following (from that same email):
Thanks :)
This also introduces a new issue in crda of setting not only power limits
but power limits based on modulation. It is permitted to use DSSS up to 100
watts, however, OFDM is permitted up to 1500 watts.
Would it be an unreasonable request to have crda support modulation
restrictions and power limit based on modulation restrictions?
This is odd, first time I hear about such a thing. Do you have a
pointer to Part 15 rules which clarifies this?
Again, I'm only familiar with FCC regulations but I don't believe this
is required for Part 15. The IEEE802.11 rules do allow for some odd
stuff but the really odd stuff tends to be handled in hardware. For
instance, we can only use OFDM on the 5GHz bands, no DSSS is permitted.
The hardware handles this for us I think, that or somewhere deep dark
and scary that I've never seen in the driver. Additionally .11a
provides three different transmit power levels based on the frequency
band you are in (and the use case). What I would need this additional
feature for is licensed use but I'm sure that somewhere in the world,
someone has a unlicensed limitation such that would make this relevant.
I suppose we can all wait around until I can successfully google such a
case or someone with relevant first hand experience comes along, but
frankly, if it isn't that painful to do it would allow the licensed
users a much greater flexibility to use the hardware without
accidentally breaking the law. Please consider it a request without
official requirement, if someone is bored, great, otherwise I'll either
learn to code better or find someone who is bored :-)
thanks,
Rick Farina
Luis
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