Starting a legal metal detecting company requires a lot of money, time, and work. I merely want the garage designer to be prepared because from what I've seen here, they are playing Russian roulette if they don't get their units FCC approved!
These pulses contain wideband frequencies. Take a look at a 10KHz pulse and you'll see appreciable frequencies in the MHz range. Lets analyze radiation resistance. Enter a 2-foot coil in an antenna simulation program and you will discover that it generates a far field. It is not like a yagi antenna. Please, a yagi antenna is designed to talk around the world. I have spent about 2 decades working with NEC antenna software. I am telling you right now, you put a 400+ volt pulse on a 2-foot coil and you are asking for trouble with the FCC.
Believe me, the last thing a garage designer wants is to get caught. The U.S. government is busy, but eventually they will get around to it and then the nightmare begins. The legal system is complex, but a good place to start is with FCC Part 15 regulatory standards. It does not matter if the detector is legal, which I seriously doubt some of these new ones are. They need to get FCC approved, period.
This post is not meant as a scare tactic. Just be prepared. Get a good lawyer. In the long run it will be cheap insurance, and the smart legal thing to do. Ignorance of the law is not a defense in court!
Paul
These pulses contain wideband frequencies. Take a look at a 10KHz pulse and you'll see appreciable frequencies in the MHz range. Lets analyze radiation resistance. Enter a 2-foot coil in an antenna simulation program and you will discover that it generates a far field. It is not like a yagi antenna. Please, a yagi antenna is designed to talk around the world. I have spent about 2 decades working with NEC antenna software. I am telling you right now, you put a 400+ volt pulse on a 2-foot coil and you are asking for trouble with the FCC.
Believe me, the last thing a garage designer wants is to get caught. The U.S. government is busy, but eventually they will get around to it and then the nightmare begins. The legal system is complex, but a good place to start is with FCC Part 15 regulatory standards. It does not matter if the detector is legal, which I seriously doubt some of these new ones are. They need to get FCC approved, period.
This post is not meant as a scare tactic. Just be prepared. Get a good lawyer. In the long run it will be cheap insurance, and the smart legal thing to do. Ignorance of the law is not a defense in court!
Paul
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