Frequency | Country Used In | Transmission Distance | |
---|---|---|---|
RF452 |
902 to 928 MHz | US, Canada, New Zealand, Australia |
|
RF407 |
902 to 928 MHz | US, Canada |
|
RF451 |
902 to 928 MHz | US, Canada, Australia |
|
RF422 |
863 to 870 MHz | EMEA (Europe, Middle East, and Africa) |
|
RF401A |
910 to 918 MHz | US, Canada |
|
RF416 |
2.450 to 2.482 GHz | Any country where 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi communications are allowed | 0.4 km (0.25 mi) with omnidirectional antenna (outdoors); up to 0.8 km (0.5 mi) with higher-gain directional antennas at ideal conditions |
RF432 |
— | — | — |
Frequency | Country Used In | Transmission Distance | |
---|---|---|---|
RF427 |
905/920 MHz | Brazil |
|
Número de FAQs relacionadas con Radios de espectro ampliado: 5
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No. Removing the interference will remove the radio signal. The radio, like all FCC Part 15 devices, is not allowed to cause harmful interferences to licensed radio communications and must accept any interference that it receives.
No. A spread-spectrum radio, like all FCC Part 15 devices, is not allowed to cause harmful interferences to licensed radio communications and must accept any interference that it receives.
Yes. Two spread-spectrum radios can be used to connect two computers.
Spread-spectrum radios work by frequency hopping and transmitting at discrete frequencies over part of the unlicensed band, rather than by transmitting over a very wide part of the spectrum as some other devices do.