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![]() OR, the differing road surface really causes varying amounts of static, as the OP observed. The act of a tire rolling on an asphalt surface involves a certain amount of deformation or "squirm" of the tire body. This scrubbing action will allow triboelectric charging; the same effect you get by rubbing the faceplate of a plastic meter or shuffling your shoes across a carpet. Different mating surfaces yield differing amounts of triboelectric generation. I have experienced static conditions, during a Wyoming snow-storm, so bad that it blanked out broadcast AM radio in my car. So just driving through the air can cause vehicle charging. Even if you discount the road surface triboelectric effect, it's also quite possible that different road surfaces might have widely varying conductivity (perhaps due to contaminates and moisture trapped in the road surface texture). -- Ed WB6WSN Bingo! Install little wire brushes on the bumper, like seen on the wings of airplanes, for the static dissipation and your troubles will vanish. Yuri, K3BU/m |
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FM Reception Static Problem | Antenna |