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![]() "DougSlug" wrote in message ... In my office we often experience instances of a "galloping" sort of buzz periodically coming from the PC speakers near co-workers who have Cingular GSM cell phones. A preliminary Web search turns up many instances of this problem. My understanding is that these phones periodically communicate with the network, and during these brief bursts the carrier is modulated at around 200 Hz resulting is a clear, repeatable buzz pattern. How is this buzz getting into the PC speaker amplifier, and, more importantly, how can it be prevented? The phones do communicate regularly with the network. The network must be constantly updated with whose phones are switched on and which cell tower is providing service. (It would be impractical to ring you for an incoming call if the network had to query every tower in the world, "Hey, I have a call for DougSlug. Who has him???") This is a surprisingly common form of Electromagnetic Interference (EMI). The RF is being coupled into the wiring and changing the conduction of the small transistor amplifier inside one of the speakers, the one with the light and switches. At work, I usually know when my co-workers cell phone will ring, because MY speakers emit a bup-bup-bup-buzz right before the ring. See, he usually keeps his phone next to the cubicle panel on his side, but by chance just inches away from my speakers. I have heard the same thing on TV, when a performer is wearing both a wireless mike and a cell phone. Rerouting the wires or relocating the phone is the obvious solution, as distance is your friend in these cases. Otherwise, adding a few ferrites to the speaker lines may work. They present a high impedance to RF traveling along the wires, but have negligible effect on the audio signal. (You probably already own ferrites pre-installed in some of your wiring -- you just didn't know it. The various connecting cords for your camcorder have those fat lumps in them. Those are ferrites. Ferrites are available for purchase in many radio and electronic stores in a form which closes, clamshell-style around the wire. You put two or three along the wire and *presto* no more buzz. Wrapping the wire multiple times around a ferrite before snapping it closed can help immensely. (This assumes you have some available slack in the speaker wires.) Some theory he http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choke_(electronics) http://www.radioshack.com/sm-snap-to...-pi-2103222.ht ml has them, but overpriced compared to the $1.00 apiece I pay for them at the San Diego-area ham radio swap meet. Also around a dollar he http://www.mouser.com/search/Refine....rPartNumber%7C 0%7C%7CP_SField I cannot advise you what to buy, but If you spring for a few of each at the $1.00 level, I really think you'll find something that works. Shipping is extra but Mouser will sell in small quantities. Thanks, Mouser. Good luck. If you go this route, please let us know what worked and how many. TKS. |
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