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Re: Our friend the FCC
> Original Poster: Hollmike-at-aol-dot-com
>
> Greg,
> I have a copy of the frequency allocation chart put out by the FCC. It
> shows several ranges of frequencies that are used by amature radio buffs
that
> are probably ok to run a TC at. There are also several Maritime frequencies
> that might be ok if you are nowhere near the ocean(don't know for sure
> though). I have this chart at work so I cannot give you specifics on this,
> but could send you a copy if you wish.
> The only "for sure" frequencies that you would not have a problem
with is
> from 0 to 10kHz. For some reason this is no man's land and the FCC would
not
> bother you if your coil ran in this region. That, of course, would mean
> making an incredibly large secondary, but who knows? it might make for one
> killer coil.
That is an interesting thought... 10kHz is realistic, but there will be
harmonics and whistlers in the arcs as well. Although the TC isn't
really
a transmitter at these freqs, it is a near-field interference source.
Question: Would a device that produces substantial near-field
interference
at 9.9kHz require FCC approval?
--
-GL
www.lod-dot-org