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Hi Richard,
(BTW, I was looking to reduce ignition noise to my D700 in the car, specifically in the VHF region). I have replaced the plugs, cap and rotor. I haven't replaced the ignition wires. I was thinking "chokes" on the wires might do it, but after thinking about it more, and relocating the articles on RFI/EMI suppression wires, it was apparent that no snap-on chokes would work as well as the wires noted below by magnecor. I now remember (from 10 years ago) what the ignition wires were that were claimed by hams as the best for reducing ignition noise generation. "Magnecor"...as in magnecor.com. That is what I put in, and they are getting pretty old , 10 years and 198K miles on the car/wires. Instead of using the 31 mix chokes, I think my money would be better spent getting another set of wires. In the end, perhaps the only thing that would have helped would have been to buy enough of the snap-on chokes to cover the wires completely, which makes no economic sense. To the "gentleman" who suggested (without offering any information or responses to my questions) that I buy the chokes, put them on and report back...sorry, I'm not providing information, I'm soliciting it. Your response didn't provide any info, didn't bother to respond to ANY of the questions, and just contained a rather pointless recommendation....if you didn't understand that I wanted someone who "knew" or had thought about the problem to offer an opinion as to the efficacy of 31 mix chokes in this application BEFORE I bothered to buy them, you missed a rather obvious point....duh! This "gentleman" also provides no real name, and no amateur callsign. The typical smart-ass troll. Thanks to the others (on-list and private), including Richard, who responded. One of the responses led me back to the source of my ten year old wires and how to replace them...I had no idea if the company was still in business or not, nor could I remember their name. They are still there, and I'm going to order a wire-set this morning. 73, p.s., I might add for learning sake, several of your answers, Richard, beg a "why not". (As in, why doesn't it matter which end, distributor or plug would be more effective, Stacking chokes vs. spacing them out along the wires doesn't matter? Why not?) Your observation that most modern cars don't have ignition noise is borderlline laughable for two reasons: 1. It's not true...most in fact do create quite a bit of RFI to HF radios and some are quite problematic even at two meters. 2. I spend my spare money on radios/antennas and computers, not new cars...which my '95 Ford Taurus with 198K miles on it testifies to. It is very well maintained, but old. (and NOISY from an RFI/Ignition point of view). Thanks for taking the time to respond. (to all) 73 ....hasan, N0AN "Richard Clark" wrote in message ... On Wed, 30 Mar 2005 06:33:36 -0600, "hasan schiers" wrote: Hi Hasan, By the numbers: 1. Where along the wire should they be placed (at the plug, at the distributor, middle of wire)? Doesn't matter. 2. Should they be stacked next to each other for better effect (series butted up against one another) and if so, how many, and again, where along the wire? Doesn't matter. 3. How many should be used and as above, how should they be "clustered"? Until you achieve relief (you haven't described why you want to do this). 4. Are these likely to be significant help on either HF or VHF? By the presumption of this indicating a receiver problem with HF or VHF, I would offer that most (modern) cars do not display such problems. You could be chasing the wrong solution. However, at the bottom line, they could help. 5. Can anyone recommend a really good set of ignition wires for best RFI suppression? Standard resistive wires. It sounds like you substituted straight wires for the factory set when they wore out. That is generally a poor choice for two reasons. One (presumably) is due to ignition interference with communications. The other is lowered fuel economy and power. The application of ferrites to straight wires is introducing resistive loss into the ignition current path. This is normally the job of resistive wire. Introducing such loss is actually a boon. The loss retards spark extinction (means that the spark will burn longer with a resistance in the path). Longer burn time means more complete ignition. This also means that the longer burn time equates to fewer HF spurious products. This is called win-win. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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