Yes, I had a neighbor who was absolutely incredulous when I told him that it was his responsibility to deal with the interference from my (properly operating) station. I offered to give him a filter for his ancient TV but he declined.
He didn't get nasty but he did call Unca Charlie. And was his face red when the FCC told him precisely the same thing I did. At that point, his wife prevailed and they bought a new flat screen. Happy ending for all except that his incredulity may have caused him to join the Tea Party. On 12/7/11, David Goodwin <[email protected]> wrote: > The FCC has set a standard and many manufacturers overseas just ignore it. > They are not supposed to get it into the us unless it abides by the > standard, but the do > > Today, if you are running a properly filtered ham rig and are still getting > into your family or neighbors stuff, it most likely their fault for buying > a sub-standard system that's below legal requirements. However, try telling > a neighbor that their stuff is the problem and it's probably unshielded, as > it should be. You will be the meany. > > dave :) > > -- > *First, make it work, then make it pretty.* > > *David Goodwin > WB4LCN > San Diego, CA* > _______________________________________________ > Flexedge mailing list > [email protected] > http://mail.flex-radio.biz/mailman/listinfo/flexedge_flex-radio.biz > This is the FlexRadio Systems e-mail Reflector called FlexEdge. It is used > for posting topics related to SDR software development and experimentalist > who are using beta versions of the software. > _______________________________________________ Flexedge mailing list [email protected] http://mail.flex-radio.biz/mailman/listinfo/flexedge_flex-radio.biz This is the FlexRadio Systems e-mail Reflector called FlexEdge. It is used for posting topics related to SDR software development and experimentalist who are using beta versions of the software.
