While I hate to send business their way ... you might check out Radio Shack. They have a gadget called (I think) an I-Roc. It is intended to transmit stereo music from CD players and MP3 players to a car FM radio. The newer ones work off 3 volts (2 AA batteries) or 12 volts from the car. Quality is pretty good but I don't know about range. Perhaps they would hook one up in the store near a window and let you test the range. Frequency selection is limited to 4 (6?) preselected frequencies. Stability seems pretty good. Price is $25 or $30. It is a rather compact fob looking device with a tail. The tail is the antenna and the jack that plugs into the audio source. -Mike -----Original Message----- From: Picdude [mailto:picdude@NARWANI.ORG] Sent: Sunday, January 25, 2004 6:31 PM To: PICLIST@MITVMA.MIT.EDU Subject: Re: Looking for an FM transmitter Looking at the manual for the Ramsey 25B now. They have a huge list of the pertinent FCC regulations on there. Seems like this application will keep the transmitter within all the regs. Cheers, -Neil. On Sunday 25 January 2004 10:51 am, Olin Lathrop scribbled: > I'm no expert on this, but I rather doubt the FCC will let you transmit > enough power to go a couple hundred feet right in the middle of the > commercial FM band. -- http://www.piclist.com#nomail Going offline? Don't AutoReply us! email listserv@mitvma.mit.edu with SET PICList DIGEST in the body -- http://www.piclist.com hint: To leave the PICList mailto:piclist-unsubscribe-request@mitvma.mit.edu