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![]() Bob wrote: wrote: Glad to have helped. As people have helped me over the years, I try to pass my bits of useful knowledge on to those who can use them. Thanks again! In your discussions with Charles Counselman, has he added anything yet to his document? He had some blank sections that were to come later, just wondering if he mentioned anything. Bob We covered many topics, but it would be hard to extract anything to post here. He does intend to post info on his search antenna. A simple 20 turn loop wound on a pill bottle will suffice to get you started. Is your Email valid? I will ask Charles if it is OK to forward you his B-field noise sensing diagram. Depending on how serious, or demented, you are, you might benifit from rereading my prior posts on RF hunts. The 20 turn loop is good for finding noisy devices. A smaller loop made from a salvaged 100uH axial ferrite inductor is great for sniffing around inside a device to find the exact noise source. I built mine in a old Sharpie dry marker case. While I added BNC females connectors to all my probes because I was in the process of trading for a spectrum anylzer and wanted to be able to use my probes with that test gear, a cheaper and more effective option for most people would be to use ~3' of RG174 terminated in the coorect connector for your noise sniffing receiver. I choose to use a DX398 because I have one and becuase it it reasonbly well shielded and does a good job as a sniffer. Maybe 99% of devices radiate RFI over a very wide frequency range. Digital noise tends to be very broadband. Every so often you will find a device that produces a strong signal on a specific frequency and does not radiate general RFI. One common frequency is 3.58MHz, US color refference burst. I had one early Apex DVD that I never could quiten down enough to live with. I suppose I ought to dig through my notes and list the more common "CPU' frequencies. As NTSC goes away, and TV horizontal moves away from 15.73426KHz, (from a grass valley "NTSC Studio Timing:") the harmonics that we are used to at ~15.73KHz increments will vanish. ATSC can be a can of snakes. (http://www.atsc.org/standards.html) Butfrom what I have seen so far ATSC will bigger VHF/UHF RFI issue. Plasma big screens have their own nasty noise signature. LCDs are cold cathode florescent illumintated and the drive oscillators tend to be in the 35~50KHz range and are fairly well shielded and (most) don't radiate too badly.Perhaps the best thing for modern SWLs is the move from over the air TV to cable and satellite. Older tube sets had very poor internal shielding and radiated sweep and color burst back out the antenna and that 300 ohm ribbon lead made a pretty effective antenna. Good hunting Terry |
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