Export Compliance Daily is a service of Warren Communications News.

An initial demonstration came off as planned and showed that Wire...

An initial demonstration came off as planned and showed that Wireless Communications Service transmissions don’t pose a risk to Sirius-XM reception, said Mary O'Connor, attorney for the WCS Coalition. Sirius-XM officials declined to comment. The FCC Office of Engineering…

Sign up for a free preview to unlock the rest of this article

Export Compliance Daily combines U.S. export control news, foreign border import regulation and policy developments into a single daily information service that reliably informs its trade professional readers about important current issues affecting their operations.

and Technology said last week that tests would start Tuesday, conducted by the coalition and Sirius-XM, but observed by others, to examine whether WCS transmissions at 2305 2320 MHz and 2345 2360 MHz cause interference to Satellite Digital Audio Radio Service reception at 2320 2345 MHz. FCC officials were on hand as witnesses. O'Connor said that from the WCS Coalition’s standpoint there were no surprises based on the group’s preliminary testing, which has found little interference. “There was a WCS base station and we provided different types of services … and we had two cars, one with WCS in the laptop and one with a Sirius or XM radio on,” O'Connor told us. “We would drive the WCS car around the Sirius-XM car to see if there was any muting of the signal to the radio.” She said about 20 observers were on hand as the demonstration got underway near Washington Dulles Airport. Demonstrations are to continue through Thursday. Sirius-XM said in a May letter to OET that demonstrations should be aimed at “helping the Commission to decide on key operating parameters such as maximum operating power and the out-of- band emissions ('OOBE') requirements for mobile transmitters, so that the Commission can develop specific rules to maximize WCS service potential while protecting existing service to 19 million satellite radio consumers.”