Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "DougSlug" wrote in message ... ----- Original Message ----- From: "DougSlug" Newsgroups: rec.radio.scanner,alt.radio.scanner,alt.ham-radio.hf Sent: Saturday, March 10, 2007 7:08 PM Subject: Carrier tones every 15 kHz in 10m band What about harmonics from wireless routers? Could that explain this interference pattern? - Doug It seems very unlikely to me. That stuff is up in the GHz. They don't tend to make subharmonics. The carrier frequency is around 2.4 GHz, sure, but the data bursts are quite a bit slower. What I don't know about is whether wireless routers broadcast data bursts at regular intervals that somehow may be getting demodulated in my receiver. They don't transmit at regular intervals. They transmit only when there is data to transfer. It is the wireless router, a NetGear WGR614. I don't know why the hell I didn't try that earlier. It does the exact same thing to my Icom IC-R20. Maybe the power supply in the router? Or is it a wireless signal phenomenon? - Doug Congrats on finding the problem. I've got a NetGear WGR614. It worked for a year then developed a heat problem. It will only run for about an hour. I openned it up. (Pry open the rubber feet and there are four little torx screws.) The Broadcom chip gets hot enough to burn your finger. Other people have reported the same thing. I bought a Linksys a few weeks ago to replace it. And I see the little transformer for the switcher in the NetGear. There is virtually no doubt that the problem is the switcher and not the wireless part. 1. The wireless is bursty and not regular. (Certainly not 15 kHz regular.) 2. Problems are almost always with harmonics and almost never with subharmonics. (How are you with Fourier transforms and convolution?) 3. TV broadcasts would be giving you fits too if your radio were sensitive to 15 kHz components of VHF/UHF signals. 4. Probably no other 802.11 device you have causes the same problem. There is a way you can test it. On the router's control page there is an option to turn off its radio while still being able to use the router with wired connections. You might try that. Another thing. It is almost always long wires that do the actual radiating. The switcher can generate noise but it won't go anywhere unless it gets coupled into the cables that attach to the router. Try unplugging the eithernet cables too to see if the noise goes away. That will leave the power cable. You could then try putting ferrites on the power cable, or wrap it up in a tight ball to keep it short. cheers, rb |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
pl tones | Scanner | |||
control tones on FRS | CB | |||
Need "PL" tones, Burlington Co, NJ | Scanner | |||
Does FRS and Ham radio use the same PL tones?? | Scanner | |||
Tones | CB |