View Single Post
  #6   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 29-05-2015, 00:33
SoftwareBug2.0's Avatar
SoftwareBug2.0 SoftwareBug2.0 is offline
Registered User
AKA: Eric
FRC #1425 (Error Code Xero)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Aug 2004
Rookie Year: 2004
Location: Tigard, Oregon
Posts: 486
SoftwareBug2.0 has a brilliant futureSoftwareBug2.0 has a brilliant futureSoftwareBug2.0 has a brilliant futureSoftwareBug2.0 has a brilliant futureSoftwareBug2.0 has a brilliant futureSoftwareBug2.0 has a brilliant futureSoftwareBug2.0 has a brilliant futureSoftwareBug2.0 has a brilliant futureSoftwareBug2.0 has a brilliant futureSoftwareBug2.0 has a brilliant futureSoftwareBug2.0 has a brilliant future
Re: US Digital wants to do export control on us

Quote:
Originally Posted by esquared View Post
The US Export Administration Regulations prohibit export of certain enabling technologies to embargoed countries. The country list varies depending on what technologies we're talking about, and applies to anything made in the US from little baby diodes to full up integrated products. Their concern is the end use of the product and country of destination. In this case, you can pretty safely state the end use (an education robot) and country of destination (your team's country).

Disclaimer: I Am Not A Lawyer, nor an Export Control Officer. I have had the (mis?)fortune to deal with the EAR and other export control issues during purchasing, marketing, and sales of various products I've designed. This stuff all sounds far more scary than the actual burden on the hobbyist.

If you're the type who just LOVES to read stuffy documents on a .gov site, see below. Encoders (and all sorts of other electronics) are subject to the EAR under Category 3 of the Commerce Control List:

https://www.bis.doc.gov/index.php/fo...nload/990-ccl3
I guess that silly person would be me . So this doesn't have any real practical applications, but I did a quick look through that document and the only mention of encoders that I could find was for absolute encoders with an accuracy of +/- 1 arcsecond, which equates to >14 bits of resolution. Looking at US Digital's website, it appears that they don't even make any encoders that meet that standard.