Telosb/Sky motes do not operate on sub-1GHz but on 2.4Ghz.

The CC1120, Spirit1, etc, for example can operate on 433MHz,
863-868/902-928MHz band, but it does not have the FCC/CEPT label but TI
provides information about how it is certifiable on specific regulation by
demonstrating test results in conformity to the regulation requirements
(Blockage, Spurious, etc).

If you build up a commercial product that uses this transceiver aiming for
a specific market (US for example), you need to certify the product.

In case of the motes, unless noticed, normally are sold as development
boards with no specific use and not flashed with a specific firmware, just
a FR4-based piece of board with components for generic use, not
specifically a product per-se (i.e not sold as weather stations).

Hope this helps,

--Antonio


On Thu, Dec 12, 2013 at 10:03 PM, John Griessen <[email protected]> wrote:

> I heard someone in the 915MHz radio module business say the rules for
> certified ISM band
> radios require radio configuration to the physically locked and firmware
> locked so the
> user cannot change it so the radio transmits at the wrong frequency.
>
> How far does one have to go with that definition of locked?
>
> The telos-b or tmote sky mote had FCC tags in 2004.  Have the rules
> changed since then?
> Has TinyOS ever been outlaw with the FCC for having user accessible code
> to set up the radio?
>
> John Griessen
> _______________________________________________
> Tinyos-help mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://www.millennium.berkeley.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tinyos-help
>



-- 
--
Antonio Liñán Colina
R+D Engineer
@: [email protected]
@: [email protected]
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