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" Uncle Peter" wrote in message
... The amount of RF required to interfere with a sensitive RF receiver is quite a few magnitudes less than what would interfere with patient support equipment. On Tue, 1 Jul 2003 21:28:36 -0400, "DOUGLAS SNOWDEN" wrote: Just curious, have any of you had trouble with your neighbors that have had their homes wired with CAT5 cable? Does it want to act like an antenna and cause interference (to them and you) ??? Doug N4IJ Ours generates noise on HF. I have a vertical antenna about 15 feet from the house and that doesn't help. We didn't have problems with the old-style coax cable Ethernet. I'll switch to shielded cat-5 cable in the near future. 73, Jim N2VX I will only speak for what I know, have observed in the field or tested in the biomed labs. When testing commenced in 1992 at Mercy, we found the majority of the problems were with switching power supplies that powered the network and computer equipment. Our discoveries and test results forced Compaq to recall equipment for noise and improper grounding [One bad Chinese supplier - they were using several at that time]. Coax [10-Base-T] will limit you to standard Ethernet speed (10 Mb) - and is subject to the quality of cable and its coax shielding - which is why Belden has specific model number of Thick and Thin Ethernet. Fiber Optic is ideal - but you have termination costs and again power issues with equipment. I have not yet tested any of the upcoming 802.3af equipment ("power for phones") - yet another potential to examine in the "wiring closet". Greg w9gb -- Do not use Reply Reply only through ARRL forwarding service to W9GB |
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