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default wrote: My electric stove is talking to my modem, resulting in the modem dropping its speed back or losing the connection (dial up). I can turn any burner on high and everything works. Turn the "infinite" control to a midpoint heat setting and the modem goes out to lunch. The controls are primitive types with a heater and bimetallic strip inside them (I disassembled one to fix it). The contacts appear to be real silver. Seems to me that you may have either (or both) of two problems: a brief voltage drop when the stove heating element is switched on (perhaps enough to "brown out" the modem's power supply) or a burst of RF noise when the contacts open and close. I'd guess that the stove heater element is drawing a pretty hefty surge when it's first turned on, before it heats up and its resistance increases. This might result in a one- or two-cycle voltage-drop brownout which affects the whole circuit and may show up in other circuits as well... it'd depend on the quality of the house wiring and of your electrical service connection. If this is the case, you might be able to correct its effect on the modem by using a UPS. Unfortunately, most consumer-type "UPS" products are actually SPS (standby power supply) designs, and they don't turn on their inverter and supply power to the device-under-load until there's been a brownout or power loss for a couple of cycles. This might not be fast enough to keep your modem happy. If your modem uses a 12 VDC supply from its wall-wart, you might be able to fix the problem by using a "12-volt" gel cell as a power supply, with a well-regulated DC supply of 13.4 - 13.5 volts to keep it charged up. If the AC voltage sags for a moment, the modem wouldn't even notice. Another possibility is that it's a burst of RF noise, carried in differential mode on the power wiring, when the bimetallic switch opens or closes. A common-mode ferrite on the wall-wart cord wouldn't help with this, I think. You could try either of two things: - A differential-and-common mode AC-line filter, at the modem. Some AC power strips incorporate them, and you can get ones with better filtering/attenuation in sealed metal cans, with either wire-lead or push-on connectors (Corcom and others make 'em, and electronics- surplus stores usually have some). - A snubber, at the stove itself (the source of the problem). The snubbers I've seen are usually caps of .1 - 1 uF in capacity, in series with a few ohms of resistance, in a flame-resistant plastic encapsulation. They're designed and rated for use directly across a power line (I believe they have "X" and "Y" rating codes). You'd probably need to have one of these wired in across the line, either just before or just after the bimetallic switch. Probably the sort of thing which should be done by a licensed electrician. A battery-powered-modem-with-float-charger-backup might also be a good way to deal with the problem if its cause is RF noise on the phone line. You could add additional filtering of the DC before it reaches the battery, to keep it well out of the modem's supply. Hmmm... another thought. You might want to check the arrangments by which the phone lines are safety-grounded at your building's MPOE. If your phone line's grounding system is connected to the same ground rod as the power (which it probably is), and if there's any amount of "ground bounce" when the stove load is turned on or off, and if there's some amount of current leakage in the phone line protection system (e.g. if it has old-style carbon-block spike-eaters, or if there's a dirt-and-moisture current path) then it's perhaps conceivable that turning the stove on and off might result in a momentary voltage spike on the phone line due to this common-ground-path setup. -- 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! |