Hi AngelC,
Our board has two labels: SCH-27845 Rev C and 700-27845 rev X4.
However, I have no doubts that the board itself is 100% FCC certifiable, because of its relative low power output. If you attach a 20 dB amplifier after the chip, then the spurii will be also amplified to such an extent that some parameters as e.g. Band-edge compliance will not pass (we use the Skyworks SE2436L, our goal was to reach at least +20dBm output). The net effect was that we are forced by the test house that did our testing to reduce the maximum power to +15 dBm and at the edge band channels (11, 12 and 25, 26) to +1, respectively +6 dBm. At least for these channels, it defeats the use of an amplifier! The problem is that the Band-edge compliance test specifies absolute values and not relative to the carrier level.
Please note that from the diagrams above the spurious signal levels are about 10dBm over the baseline (modulated or unmodulated continuous carrier). This is in fact the amount of power lost in in order to pass the FCC's Band edge compliance test.
Anyway, to evidence the issue is very simple, just hook the board to a spectrum analyser, switch it to PRBS9 transmit mode: you will see the occasional peaks jumping around the carrier. If you switch the spectrum analyser to hold mode, after 30 seconds or more you will see the baseline growing with about 10 dBm. This does not happen in TX continuous mode, both modulated or unmodulated. Clearly, the transmitter switches the internal PA too early (or too late when the T sequence is done), before the PLL is fully stabilised, or maybe there is a pulling effect on the PLL when the internal PA is switched on. Our hope was that Freescale knows about this issue and that there is maybe a modem register that can be tweaked to eliminate, or at least attenuate this effect. Otherwise we will have to look elsewhere to other competing solutions. It is rather disappointing as we have already invested quite some time and money in this project.
Lix