subject: How Do You Know These about FM Transmitter [print this page] FM transmitter is now very popular in our life, many people like to use FM transmitter with their iPhone or iPad, and other mp3 players.
FM (frequency modulation) transmitters can yield a number of results, depending on their power and range. Extremely low-power transmitters can be used in very small locales, for purposes such as eavesdropping. At the high end, radio transmitters are sometimes used for propaganda and psychological warfare through broadcasting. Between these extremes are the low-power radio transmitters, capable of making every user a broadcaster, that have long been an issue of concern for the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).
Mini transmitters, which have a range of about 50 feet (15.2 m), are available commercially to serve purposes such as that of a baby monitor, but are easily adapted for eavesdropping as well. Although they are capable of operating anywhere on the FM dial, from 88 to 108 MHz, the recommended range for most of these is 88 to 95 MHz, where there is least likely to be interference. Low-power FM transmitters, with a range of 100 to 400 feet (30.5122m), make it possible to transmit voices over a greater distance, and are applied commercially for purposes such as listening to compact discs (CDs) in a car that does not have a CD player.
Both mini and low-power FM transmitters have such limited powerless than 1 wattthat they pose no concern to communications regulators. On the other hand, high-power or professional FM transmitters that are commercially availablesome with as many as 35 watts of powertheoretically have the capacity to make anyone a radio broadcaster. This could pose serious concerns with regard to interference and communication jamming, and by 1998, the availability of FM transmitters forced the FCC to at least consider the idea of legalizing low-power transmission. The concept has been under consideration for some time, but many would-be broadcasters are as likely to choose the Internet as a simpler, non-interfering environment in which to operate a radio site.
FM transmitters are usually battery driven, but some use the cigarette lighter socket in cars, or draw their power from the device itself. They are typically used with portable audio devices such as CD or MP3 players, but are also used to broadcast other outputs (such as that from a computer sound card) throughout a home or other building.