Alright, I must be wrong here...This thing has little square paddles for antenna...and it is interferred with when I run my microwave... so it must be this 2.4 ghz, eh? > Microwave ovens run at 2.4 GHz, but then again, so do many of the video > senders. > Does yours have square "paddle" looking antennas? If so, it's 2.4G. > > If you're on the 900 meg band, it could be any number of things, from > another part 15 device, to a ham (like me) who runs video at anywhere from > several watts to 1500 watts. I only run 60W myself. There are also > industrial and scientific and medical (hence "ISM" band designation) that > uses these frequencies, and they can be pretty large emitters when they are > operating. > > The part 15 rules are pretty clear on your options here: > http://www.lwca.org/sitepage/part15/part15_s.txt > > You can move or re-orient your antennas, and you can modify the antenna on > the receiver to be more directional, and/or reduce receiver gain. You can't > modify the transmitter or it's antenna in any way. > > Another possibility is that your device itself is intermittently defective. > > Seriously, I'm not sure what the legal implications are, but I see no > literal problem in say, mounting the unmodified transmitter with it's > unmodified antenna, at the focus of a dish.. It does seem to part company > with the spirit of the law, but it seems in compliance with the word of the > law.. IANAL, YMMV, get a ham licence and play with the big boys :) You get > 1500W and gain antennas on both ends. > I want something with a lawnmower engine on it !!! seriously, I'll try the am radio detector method... I'm guessing this is someone's airconditioner maybe, the weather couldn't do this could it?? -- http://www.piclist.com hint: The PICList is archived three different ways. See http://www.piclist.com/#archives for details.