(02-27-2020, 01:07 AM)70sSanO Wrote: Back to the 3G/4G question.
On the bottom of my Aircurve 10 machine is the following:
FCC IDi. 2ACHL-AIR104G.
I googled that and found documents that also has a FCC IDi. 2ACHL-AIR103G.
I didn’t do any more research, but it seems that the 3G and 4G at the end of the FCC ID “might” indicate the broadband technology.
It may be worth it to flip your machine over and look at the FCC ID.
John
The FCC registration leads to an FCC website that has a copy of the device manual, pictures of the chip and board, and, of course, RedMed's request for confidential treatment of certain documents. My ID is 2ACHL-AIR10CD which might indicate CDMA.
Using the picture of the transmitter chip, I Googled the chip number and found the specs -- but the clue might live in the chip's temperature specs:
Operational temperature:
30 ~ +60C: The module is fully functional(*) in the entire temperature range and fully meets the 3GPP2 specifications.
30 ~ +85C: The module is fully functional(*) in the entire temperature range. Behavior outside the range of 30 ~ +60C might deviate from 3GPP2 specification.
(*)Functional: the module is able to make and receive voice calls, data calls, and SMS.
This leads me to think I have a 3G device that is rapidly disappearing. (3GPP2 provides globally applicable Technical Specifications for a 3rd Generation Mobile System )
Thanks for the tip. Now to see what ResMed says.