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Terrestrial Broadcasting
Terrestrial Television, Digital and Analogue
Switch Mode Power Supply Woes - New Aerial/Mast head amplifier.
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<blockquote data-quote="jeallen01" data-source="post: 1057724" data-attributes="member: 176704"><p>Not sure whether you mean that next door having a ham radio, or just normal domestic kit. Anyway, to me, that seems like a bit of an "it all depends" situation!</p><p></p><p>If the kit next door is domestic and is shown to be definitely "compliant" to the relevant standards, then I'm not sure either you or Ofcom could do anything about it, and you might have to live with the situation, move stuff around and/or add some filtration.</p><p></p><p>OTOH, if the other kit is ham, then I'm not sure what you could do unless you or Ofcom can show that it <strong>is </strong>causing excessive interference. If that kit is "commercially-built" ham stuff, then there are in-band and out-of-band emissions limits which must be met by the supplier, and by the installer/user in terms of the installation conditions - and, if those have not been met, then there would be a case for Ofcom to require removal of that kit.</p><p></p><p>However, if the other kit is home-brewed, then that is specifically exempt under the Directives and standards, and so you would have to rely on Ofcom's interpretation of the situation. OTOH, if the situation persisted then, assuming that you are both fully-licenced RSGB operators, then it might be a case of asking for guidance from them (but I would have hoped that, hams being a generally friendly crowd, the matter could be resolved between you and your neighbour!).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jeallen01, post: 1057724, member: 176704"] Not sure whether you mean that next door having a ham radio, or just normal domestic kit. Anyway, to me, that seems like a bit of an "it all depends" situation! If the kit next door is domestic and is shown to be definitely "compliant" to the relevant standards, then I'm not sure either you or Ofcom could do anything about it, and you might have to live with the situation, move stuff around and/or add some filtration. OTOH, if the other kit is ham, then I'm not sure what you could do unless you or Ofcom can show that it [B]is [/B]causing excessive interference. If that kit is "commercially-built" ham stuff, then there are in-band and out-of-band emissions limits which must be met by the supplier, and by the installer/user in terms of the installation conditions - and, if those have not been met, then there would be a case for Ofcom to require removal of that kit. However, if the other kit is home-brewed, then that is specifically exempt under the Directives and standards, and so you would have to rely on Ofcom's interpretation of the situation. OTOH, if the situation persisted then, assuming that you are both fully-licenced RSGB operators, then it might be a case of asking for guidance from them (but I would have hoped that, hams being a generally friendly crowd, the matter could be resolved between you and your neighbour!). [/QUOTE]
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Terrestrial Broadcasting
Terrestrial Television, Digital and Analogue
Switch Mode Power Supply Woes - New Aerial/Mast head amplifier.
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