Consumer Electronics FAQ


Phones that interfere next to radio frequency?

Just recently, I be thinking about getting a long compass phone for my house since cell phones cost too much and there are too copious fees associated with cell phones. When I did some surfing online, I found some phones that you could hook up to your existing phone splash. However, those phones typically came from some distributor contained by China or some other foreign country. How do I know if those phones will work on my line? I live surrounded by the United States and I currently have verizon. What do I want to know before I in reality buy one of those phones. I tried to find this information online but I was incompetent to find it anywhere. Someone suggested a cordless phone company, but I'm not looking for an ordinary cordless phone. I want a cordless phone that I can use several kilometers away and still net the calls on my phone smudge at home. Here is one such phone that I found.
http://www.telephonemagic.com/voyager-lo...

Answers:    Cordless phones are limited contained by power to comply with FCC regulations. If you use a large powered one, be sure it is on a frequency that isn't in use already. Like read out, the police or fire department. If the frequency is designated (reserved) and active (traffic), you will go and get busted because your signal will interfere with theirs. Not to mention theirs near yours. I have a different cordless that works for about a mile. Its permissible. I think it works so capably because the receiver is upstairs and I live at the top of a hummock.

Good luck!



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