Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Jim Leder wrote: After several months of just not listening to my 2 meter base station, I finally took time to find the source of the interference that held the squelch open on the repeater channel I listen to most often. Turned out it was my Dlink DI-604 router. I borrowed a Linksys NR-041 router from my neighbor and it works a little better. I can now listen to the 145.390 repeater, not because the Linksys puts out no RFI, but only because it puts it out in a different place (mostly in the 146.46-146.58 range). I will probably invest in a newer router, probably wireless. Question I have is does anyone have any experience with the new breed of wireless routers that are reasonable clean in the RFI/2 meter spectrum? Thanks. Back in August I helped my city's ARES/RACES EC chase down a 2-meter interference problem at his condo. An HP spectrum analyzer showed a whole series of regularly-spaced spurs throughout the 2-meter band - most strong enough to de-squelch an HT, and several strong enough to compete with repeater-output signals on the same or nearby frequencies and make communication difficult or impossible. He had the usual "cable channel 18" spur on 145.250 (not a new problem at his QTH) but the multiple spurs were something new. By plugging a measuring-tape Yagi-Uda foxhunt antenna into the spectrum analyzer, we quickly localized the source of the signal to the neighboring condo unit, second floor, rear of the building, polarized 45 degrees from vertical :-) He spoke with his neighbor, and they quickly identified the neighbor's new Netgear 802.11b/g WAP/router/switch as the cause. We did some RF-snooping with the spectrum analyzer and a rubber duck, and determined that the spurs were radiating from within the router's case itself. The source seemed to be on the right side of the case, just in front of the DC power inlet jack. There was no significant spur radiation from the power cord itself - it was coming from the PC board, and whatever ferrites or whatever Netgear had put on the DC inlet were doing their job just fine. My conclusion was that the Netgear model in question uses a buck-mode switching voltage regulator, operating at a switching frequency of about 30-40 kHz (the spacing of the spurs we saw), and that its internal switch generates very fast current rise/fall times which radiate harmonics from the PC board. I ran a similar test on an older model of Netgear wireless router (one of a couple I'd picked up at a swap meet) and observed no such problem. The older router's switcher does emit some low-level 2-meter hash into a nearby probe, but it's much less energetic and appears as broadband RF noise with no significant peaks. Possibly the older unit has a spectrum-spreading feature in its regulator, or possibly it's just a better design RF-wise (slower switching edges, self-shielding inductors, better grounding/routing on the board, etc.). The noisy router is a Netgear model WGR614 v6 (802.11b/g), FCC ID PY305100002. The non-noisy one is a Netgear model MR814 v2 (802.11b), FCC ID PY3MR814v2. My EC's neighbor (a retired EE who takes Part 15 quite seriously) went out and bought a different model of b/g router, and the problem went away. I'm afraid I don't know the number of the replacement model. Given how frequently manufacturers revise their hardware (every time their OEM gets a new batch of parts, I suspect) I think you're probably going to have to test individual models for acceptable QRM levels. A model number which looks OK today, might or might not have the same guts in it as a unit of the same model number that you buy three months from now. A year or so before that, a few other guys and I used the same HP spectrum analyzer to locate the source of some QRM which was causing a buzzing squelch-tail interference on numerous local 2-meter repeaters. It turned out to be a Netgear 4-port wired-Ethernet hub, which was howling like a whole chorus of dire wolves on a high-order harmonic of its (drifty) internal crystal's frequency. The signal was apparently getting into all of the 10BaseT wiring and back out the power cord into the mains... his whole apartment was radiating. From a block away we could "see" when the owner started to download files from the Internet, thanks to the strong pulsing spur which would appear somewhere in the 2-meter band. I offered him one of my spare 6-port hubs (an Airlink) in return for his defective unit, he agreed, we made the exchange. Problem solved, hasn't returned. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
router question | Shortwave | |||
(OT)- static- linksys router? | Shortwave | |||
Ethernet "thicknet" coax thru walls of house for ham radio antenna | Antenna | |||
Trade PRO 2039 for a DSL Router | Swap | |||
Wireless Router & Receiver Noise ? | Shortwave |