I have come up with the idea to start a company selling wireless equipment I build myself out of components available from Digikey. However, FCC certification costs about $5k ($3k for a transmitter, $2k for receiver). However, I don't know if my products will sell and don't want to invest $5k into government regulations. Is there a loophole in the law for small businesses as long as the devices being sold are in compliance? I believe they would pass certification easily, as the transmitter does not need to go very far and is under powered as a result. Any explanatory help would be appreciated
2/12/2009 12:46:36 AM
this might do better in tech talk - let me know if you want me to move it
2/12/2009 9:10:07 AM
how much power
2/12/2009 9:15:11 AM
use wireless components that are already certified?
2/12/2009 9:19:40 AM
sounds like a neat idea. hope it works for ya
2/12/2009 9:28:47 AM
^^ I asked the distributor and they said that, yes, I would be fine if every component I used to build my product was already FCC certified. Regretfully, these are basic level components and therefore uncertifiable, as it is the total package that makes the noise (if I wanted to, this thing could easily fail certification). The datasheet from the parts manufacturer has a section on the FCC but only mentions the one way of achieving certification (the $5k). OmarBadu, I guess you are right. Move it on to tech talk if you would, thants.
2/12/2009 11:54:01 AM
Out of curiosity, what would yo be building?
2/12/2009 1:40:14 PM
2/12/2009 2:34:46 PM
there's a difference between not investing and trying to keep overhead low
2/12/2009 2:50:10 PM
well it seems that FCC compliance would be rather important to the business
2/12/2009 3:09:28 PM
^^yes, but this is not keeping overhead low. This certification is essential for an ROI to even be possible. Otherwise you just have wasted money on a product you can't sell.[Edited on February 12, 2009 at 3:10 PM. Reason : ^]
2/12/2009 3:09:59 PM
2/12/2009 3:21:04 PM
2/12/2009 3:44:36 PM
I'm pretty sure Lonesnark knows a ton more about this shit than you do.
2/12/2009 4:08:15 PM
2/12/2009 4:37:27 PM
PM me what you're building. I'm a meteorologist and I'm unlikely to have the technical skills to steal and exploit your ideas.
2/12/2009 5:03:54 PM
2/12/2009 5:16:44 PM
Sounds like wireless usb to me.
2/12/2009 5:20:15 PM
^^Two things.Check section 15.103 for possible exemptions. The other option is selling your device as a kit. If you can sell it incomplete, requiring the buyer to purchase final components elsewhere (and these components are the wave radiators) and install them themselves, you should also be exempt.Second thing. If you are building this :thing: based off of a known, commercial device, and simply undercutting the pricepoint with exactly the same functionality, you are going to have lawsuits on your hands if you ever make a real go at this.It's one thing to build an interoperable device. That is fine and dandy legal, patent or not.It's another to know the implementation of a device and copy it, then sell it avoiding licensing of the design.
2/12/2009 6:08:16 PM
"Digital devices that have a power consumption not exceeding 6 nW." What on earth consumes so little power? A wrist watch?
2/13/2009 12:26:28 PM
sounds like this idea is steeped in failure.not only are you trying to rip off a design, you're trying to bypass the organization that will ultimately tell you whether or not you can sell this ripped off design. they wont care that it's ripped off, as they're not patent enforcement agents, but still.I guess you're trying to save that 5k for legal fees.
2/13/2009 9:26:11 PM
this will only work if you are interested in making one
2/13/2009 10:14:16 PM
2/14/2009 12:40:27 AM
2/14/2009 6:13:20 PM
^^There's a big difference between intentional emitters and unintentional emitters. There's also a big difference based on emissions range. If it's under 30ft and within certain rf ranges, you should only need a statement of validation (very very oversimplified, but that's the gist).Basically you can submit a statement of validation that says "my device emits X, which falls under the requirements for full certification" and then you are basically fine, unless a 3rd party decides to test your statement and finds it erronious. That'll still probably cost you a few hundred bucks, but it should be considerably cheaper, and may let you sell it as a product rather than a kit. Honestly you should contact one of the test labs and just talk to them. From my admittedly limited experience, they have always been pretty helpful. At worst you can get some quotes to find out what it will really cost you, at best you may find legal ways around full FCC testing compliance.
2/14/2009 7:02:26 PM
bump
6/23/2009 1:48:49 AM
Whatever happened to this? Do you have a shipping product or did you give up or what?
6/23/2009 7:25:36 AM
if you register a company in another country then you should be exempt from having to make your product fcc compliant, like other cheap chinese things.
6/23/2009 9:15:07 AM