FCC regulations

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The metal cabinet on the Kaypro II reduces the radiated electrical energy to a low level. The radiated interference on the weak, low-frequency television stations (channels 2 and 5) in my area was negligible.

The unit I tested did, however, have some conductive radiation through the power lines. My wireless intercom became noisy when the unit was turned on and really set up a racket when i used the disk drives. A filter in the line cord cured most of the problem. I checked with Nonlinear Systems, which confirmed that my evaluation unit did not have an internal line-filter installed. The company was aware that such a filter was needed and planned to install one on future production machines.

(Infoworld, October 18, 1982)

A note about Filter Caps

At this point it is worth talking about RFI or Radio Frequency Interference. The switch mode power supplies used in the Kaypro machines and in most modern computers produces a large amount of interference if it is not suppressed with filtering mechanisms.

All of the power supplies used by Kaypro have basic filtering capacitors (caps) installed from the supplier. Some of these are disk caps and some are film caps. The disk caps are not as good or safe as the film caps. The film caps from this era are usually made by the "RIFA" company. These caps when they are placed across the positive and negative lines can carry 120 or 240 volts through them. They were designed to last about 20 years. The thought was that in 20 years no one would want to use the computer anymore. When they age the outer shell tends to crack allowing the electrolyte inside to go from a liquid to a gas and escape from the capacitor.

This causes the famous "blue smoke" of the machine to be released when the RIFA cap blows itself apart. While removal of the broken cap will allow the machine to run again it can be problematic and reduce the signals/bandwidth of TV, Radio, wireless devices, and Wifi.

They can be replaced with brand new RIFA caps or hard outer plastic filter caps of the type removed (X2 or Y2) except as noted on my Power Supplies webpage. Both should be replaced in another 20 years.

Case mounted RFI filters

The metal case of the Kaypro works great at keeping the RFI signals from coming out but there is one key weak point. The power cord coming out acts like an antenna. To combat this an RFI plug is used. It has additional filter caps built in which minimizes both incoming and outgoing RFI. The first two versions of the Kaypro II did not have a filter plug.

The cord comes directly through the case. No plug filter.

The cord comes through a plate in an opening designed for a filter plug but there is no filter plug.

Finally we have a filter plug.

If you still have interference with other devices after replacing the Filter Caps on the power supply the filter plug is the next item to replace.

FCC Compliance

In America the FCC requires compliance of equipment used in some Commercial and all Residential areas. FCC compliance certification is the responsibility of the manufacturer. The FCC makes the manufacture perform the tests and submits the results to the FCC.

The initial Kaypro II did not have FCC compliance. In the September NewsGram to dealers Kaypro states, "Pursuant to FCC rules each computer must carry the enclosed sticker. Please attach them to any computer shipped to you before September."

I believe the sticker that they are referring to is this one.

I would suspect that in September they began putting them on in the factory.

The FCC ID registry shows that R Johnson is the contact at Kaypro for all of the FCC IDs. It is likely that this is Roland Johnson.

FCC IDs Issued to Kaypro
ID Product Date Issued
CUL7XL81-003 Kaypro II (81-003) Dec 13, 1983
CUL7XL81-004 Kaypro 4 (81-004) Jan 4, 1984
CUL7XL81-015 K4 (81-015) June 28, 1984
CUL7XLKP2 All K2, K2X, New 2, and Kaypro 1 July 18, 1984
CUL7XLROBIE Robie July 18, 1984
CUL7XLKP4 K4? Aug 1, 1984
CUL7XLK286 286? July 2, 1985
CUL7XLK10 Kaypro 10 July 7, 1985
CUL7XLK16 Kaypro 16 Jan 13, 1986
CUL7XLKMD ? March 19, 1986
CUL7XL2562 ? June 23, 1986
CUL7XL3298 ? June 23, 1986
CUL7XL3805 ? June 23, 1986
CUL7XL3918 ? June 23, 1986
CUL7XL4310 ? June 23, 1986
CUL7XL4344 ? June 23, 1986
CUL7XL4690 ? June 23, 1986
CUL7XL4703 ? June 23, 1986
CUL7XLK386 386? Sep 2, 1987
CUL7XLK2000PLUS Kaypro_2000+ Sep 25, 1987
CUL7XLEXT5.25 External 5 1/4 Drive? Oct 8, 1987
CUL7XL286 286? Oct 19, 1987
CUL7XLK286I 286i? Dec 18, 1987
CUL7XLKP1A Kaypro Micro 1 Apr 18, 1988
CUL7XL286-16 286 (81-068) Jul 25, 1988
CUL7XL286I-16 286i 16? Jul 26, 1988
CUL7XLKC2 KC2 Oct 24, 1989
CUL7XLKC1 Kaypro KC1 Dec 13, 1989
CUL7XLKPHF ? Dec 13, 1989

They would get FCC compliance and the II, 2, 2X, and 4 would bear these stickers.

I have not seen an FCC sticker on a Kaypro 10 or 2000.

I have not been able to find on the FCC website the ID CUL7XLPC10. These appear on some Kaypro PCs.