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In article ,
"Doug Dotson" dougdotson@NOSPAMcablespeedNOSPAMcom wrote: My ICOM-M710 can be tuned off frequency on the Marine SSB channels. Not sure why that might be type accepted but a ham rig doing the same thing is not. That's the general logic from the folks that told me that many hams rigs are essentually type accepted. Doug, k3qt s/v Callista Type Acceptance is a "Legal Designation" that states that this particular Radio Model has passed the required Testing and Design Criteria to meet that requirement. This is done by the OEM, and they submit the results of that testing, along with two actual production Radios to the "Office of the Chief Engineer" for testing in his Lab. "essentually type accepted" is an OEM's cop-out, for I don't want to spend the MONEY it would take to get this model into compliance, and so I just sell it into a non-Type Acceptance market, and save myself the grief of proving that the radio is as good as I say it is. Yea, there are a lot of the "Type Acceptance" spec that most ham radios can pass, with no problem, but there are a few important ones that they just can't make, because they aren't designed to make that spec. IMD is one of these Biggies. Operational Control Design is another requirement that keeps these ham radios from being acceptable. Bruce in alaska -- add a 2 before @ |