If you think at pulse definition being in one of the triangulation car detector system, a pulse is any electromagnetical radiation ( AM or FM modulated or not) which has a rise and a fall time. So, if you are thinking to various approval papers probably will be difficult. 100mW/10GHz is enough power. If you'll experiment a long time in open space with this transmitter be aware about the cummulative effect of the radiation for the soft tissues ( brain, livery etc ) The rules said you can stay only in max 20mW/cm2 of microwave radiation. And believe me, after 4 hours you'll be nervous. This is valable for GSM talking also. A GSM phone trying to link in a bad network is emitting about 2W to 6W at 800/900 MHz near the brain ! Vasile On Thu, 6 Sep 2001, Sean H. Breheny wrote: > Hi Vasile, > > Probably around 100mW, not very high but high enough that amateur > privileges would have to be used. Where does one go to find out the > definition of pulse? How did you know that this would be considered pulse? > In the FCC regs, there is a definition of "pulse" as an emission type, but > it, somewhat recursively, uses the word pulse in the definition. To my > mind, the normal definition of a pulse usually involves sudden steps in > amplitude, so I think they should mention exactly what they mean if an FM > waveform could be considered to be pulsed even though it has constant > amplitude. What if I fed audio consisting of a set of pulses into a regular > FM transmitter? > > Thanks, > > Sean > > At 08:29 AM 9/6/01 +0300, you wrote: > > Yes. Could you tell us what output power range are you thinking at ? > > > >Cheers, vasile > > > >-- > >http://www.piclist.com hint: The PICList is archived three different > >ways. See http://www.piclist.com/#archives for details. > > --------------------------------------------------------------- > NetZero Platinum > Only $9.95 per month! > Sign up in September to win one of 30 Hawaiian Vacations for 2! > http://my.netzero.net/s/signup?r=platinum&refcd=PT97 > > -- > http://www.piclist.com hint: The PICList is archived three different > ways. See http://www.piclist.com/#archives for details. > > -- http://www.piclist.com#nomail Going offline? Don't AutoReply us! email listserv@mitvma.mit.edu with SET PICList DIGEST in the body