FCC 95.673 Revised as of September 29, 2014
Goto Year:2013 |
2015
§ 95.673 Copy of rules.
A copy of part 95, subpart D, of the FCC Rules, current at the time of
packing of the transmitter, must be furnished with each CB transmitter
marketed.
[ 53 FR 36789 , Sept. 22, 1988. Redesignated at 61 FR 28769 , June 6,
1996, and further redesignated at 61 FR 46567 , Sept. 4, 1996]
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Appendix 1 to Subpart E of Part 95--Glossary of Terms
The definitions used in this subpart E are:
Authorized bandwidth. Maximum permissible bandwidth of a transmission.
Carrier power. Average TP during one unmodulated RF cycle.
CB. Citizens Band Radio Service.
CB transmitter. A transmitter that operates or is intended to operate
at a station authorized in the CB.
Channel frequencies. Reference frequencies from which the carrier
frequency, suppressed or otherwise, may not deviate by more than the
specified frequency tolerance.
Crystal. Quartz piezo-electric element.
Crystal controlled. Use of a crystal to establish the transmitted
frequency.
dB. Decibels.
EIRP. Effective Isotropic Radiated Power. Antenna input power times
gain for free-space or in-tissue measurement configurations required by
MedRadio, expressed in watts, where the gain is referenced to an
isotropic radiator.
FCC. Federal Communications Commission.
Filtering. Refers to the requirement in § 95.633(b).
FRS. Family Radio Service.
GMRS. General Mobile Radio Service.
GMRS transmitter. A transmitter that operates or is intended to operate
at a station authorized in the GMRS.
Harmful interference. Any transmission, radiation or induction that
endangers the functioning of a radionavigation or other safety service
or seriously degrades, obstructs or repeatedly interrupts a
radiocommunication service operating in accordance with applicable
laws, treaties and regulations.
Mean power. TP averaged over at least 30 cycles of the lowest
modulating frequency, typically 0.1 seconds at maximum power.
Medical Body Area Network (MBAN). An MBAN is a low power network
consisting of a MedRadio programmer/control transmitter and multiple
medical body-worn devices all of which transmit or receive non-voice
data or related device control commands for the purpose of measuring
and recording physiological parameters and other patient information or
performing diagnostic or therapeutic functions via radiated bi- or
uni-directional electromagnetic signals.
Medical body-worn device. Apparatus that is placed on or in close
proximity to the human body (e.g., within a few centimeters) for the
purpose of performing diagnostic or therapeutic functions.
Medical body-worn transmitter. A MedRadio transmitter intended to be
placed on or in close proximity to the human body (e.g., within a few
centimeters) used to facilitate communications with other medical
communications devices for purposes of delivering medical therapy to a
patient or collecting medical diagnostic information from a patient.
Medical implant device. Apparatus that is placed inside the human body
for the purpose of performing diagnostic or therapeutic functions.
Medical implant event. An occurrence or the lack of an occurrence
recognized by a medical implant device, or a duly authorized health
care professional, that requires the transmission of data from a
medical implant transmitter in order to protect the safety or
well-being of the person in whom the medical implant transmitter has
been implanted.
Medical implant transmitter. A MedRadio transmitter in which both the
antenna and transmitter device are designed to operate within a human
body for the purpose of facilitating communications from a medical
implant device.
Medical Micropower Network (MMN). An ultra-low power wideband network
consisting of a MedRadio programmer/control transmitter and medical
implant transmitters, all of which transmit or receive non-voice data
or related device control commands for the purpose of facilitating
functional electric stimulation, a technique using electric currents to
activate and monitor nerves and muscles.
MedRadio programmer/control transmitter. A MedRadio transmitter that
operates or is designed to operate outside of a human body for the
purpose of communicating with a receiver, or for triggering a
transmitter, connected to a medical implant device or to a medical
body-worn device used in the MedRadio Service; and which also typically
includes a frequency monitoring system that initiates a MedRadio
communications session.
MedRadio Service. Medical Device Radiocommunication Service.
MedRadio transmitter. A transmitter authorized to operate in the
MedRadio service.
MURS. Multi-Use Radio Service.
Peak envelope power. TP averaged during one RF cycle at the highest
crest of the modulation envelope.
R/C. Radio Control Radio Service.
R/C transmitter. A transmitter that operates or is intended to operate
at a station authorized in the R/C.
RF. Radio frequency.
TP. RF transmitter power expressed in W, either mean or peak envelope,
as measured at the transmitter output antenna terminals.
Transmitter. Apparatus that converts electrical energy received from a
source into RF energy capable of being radiated.
W. Watts.
[ 65 FR 60878 , Oct. 13, 2000, as amended at 74 FR 22708 , May 14, 2009;
77 FR 4269 , Jan. 27, 2012; 77 FR 55733 , Sept. 11, 2012]
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Subpart F--218-219 MHz Service
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General Provisions
Source: 57 FR 8275 , Mar. 9, 1992, unless otherwise noted.
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