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On Tue, 28 Jun 2005 15:39:57 -0700, Frank Gilliland
wrote: Often common mode currents are also rich in harmonic energy and that is what reradiates and cause TVI and interference. Hogwash. Harmonics don't just appear because of common-mode currents. They must come from a source -- i.e, the transmitter. And conductors of common-mode currents don't have any magical properties that let them conduct or radiate harmonics any better than the fundamental frequency. That's RF voodoo. ***** Harmonics are not there due to just common mode. My mistake there. What I was thinking and what I wrote were not well alligned. To generate harmonics off a the shield of the coax from an external induced current, one needs a means of rectification. That can come from two dissimilar metals that are not properly electrically connected. Then the shield can become a radiator of externally induced currents. It is the diode effect of two dissimilar metals that is the source of harmonics. james |