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The Strange True Story of a Radio Station's Transmitter in New York State
I've heard variants of this story for years, but have yet to see one shred
of real evidence that it actually occurred. The closest I've seen that could be regarded as 'real' evidence was a memo that circulated around PP&L (Pennsylvania Power and Light) back in the summer of 1972 or 73 that mentioned a farmer that ALLEGEDLY got shocks off a coil of fence wire he was installing. (The power right of way went over his pasture and the indication was that he was stringing a fence under one of the then new extremely high voltage lines. 750KV if I remember, but maybe only 500KV.) Even then, I thought the right of ways were 'clear' under the big lines, which makes even this story suspect. Mike "Walt Davidson" wrote in message ... On Sat, 9 Aug 2008 14:35:25 +0100, "Alec" wrote: Back at about the same time the BBC had (and still has) a powerful transmitter on 200khz (now198) a local farmer who lived close to the station built a large tuning coil in the loft and lit his house using fluorescent tubes. He was successfully prosecuted for stealing electricity or something similar. If this is true (and I have no reason to doubt it), did it make the signal weaker for everybody else? 73 de G3NYY -- Walt Davidson Email: g3nyy @despammed.com |
The Strange True Story of a Radio Station's Transmitter in New York State
the electric field under ehv lines can be high enough to give shocks,
especially if it were a long piece of wire insulated from the ground running along or across the right of way. There can also be other factors, magnetic induction is possible if the wire is long enough and he was closing a loop of it, like the top wire of an electric fence would be. There can also be ground currents due to imbalance in the 3 phases between substations, the currents induced on the static wire that is attached to the towers, leaky insulator strings, leaky lightning arresters, etc. the fields at ground level are supposed to be calculated into the design by the utility to be below the specified safe levels, but changes in ground moisture, air humidity, temperature, sag in the line caused by resistive or solar heating, can cause unexpected shocking experiences on the ground. where i used to work we would demonstrate that for utility engineers by setting up a worst case test line, having them measure the fields, and then do things like hold up a metal ribbed umbrella or touch a key to a car door lock. note though that these are 60hz currents, the human body is relatively sensitive to that frequency and it is easily detected by most people. lf or mf radio frequencies are less likely to be directly felt unless they get high enough of a voltage/current to burn. "Mike Y" wrote in message ... I've heard variants of this story for years, but have yet to see one shred of real evidence that it actually occurred. The closest I've seen that could be regarded as 'real' evidence was a memo that circulated around PP&L (Pennsylvania Power and Light) back in the summer of 1972 or 73 that mentioned a farmer that ALLEGEDLY got shocks off a coil of fence wire he was installing. (The power right of way went over his pasture and the indication was that he was stringing a fence under one of the then new extremely high voltage lines. 750KV if I remember, but maybe only 500KV.) Even then, I thought the right of ways were 'clear' under the big lines, which makes even this story suspect. Mike "Walt Davidson" wrote in message ... On Sat, 9 Aug 2008 14:35:25 +0100, "Alec" wrote: Back at about the same time the BBC had (and still has) a powerful transmitter on 200khz (now198) a local farmer who lived close to the station built a large tuning coil in the loft and lit his house using fluorescent tubes. He was successfully prosecuted for stealing electricity or something similar. If this is true (and I have no reason to doubt it), did it make the signal weaker for everybody else? 73 de G3NYY -- Walt Davidson Email: g3nyy @despammed.com |
The Strange True Story of a Radio Station's Transmitter in NewYork State
Mike Y wrote:
I've heard variants of this story for years, but have yet to see one shred of real evidence that it actually occurred. The closest I've seen that could be regarded as 'real' evidence was a memo that circulated around PP&L (Pennsylvania Power and Light) back in the summer of 1972 or 73 that mentioned a farmer that ALLEGEDLY got shocks off a coil of fence wire he was installing. (The power right of way went over his pasture and the indication was that he was stringing a fence under one of the then new extremely high voltage lines. 750KV if I remember, but maybe only 500KV.) Yes, this can easily happen. A few years ago, I was doing some consulting work for a major power company at one of their very high voltage substations. EVERYTHING was hot, from the fence surrounding the property to the doorknobs on the buildings to the employee cars parked on the property. Even though this site was usually unattended, to a man, all the power company employees disliked pulling maintenance duty there. Even then, I thought the right of ways were 'clear' under the big lines, which makes even this story suspect. What do you mean by "clear"? Yes, they clear the brush under their right of way (which can pass over private property) , but I don't think anyone has repealed the laws of induction and electrostatic fields. So, your story above doesn't surprise me in the least. P.S. When I worked for CBS TV, they also owned a 50 kW AM station connected to (at the time) a 12(!) tower directional array. At homes in the main lobe of the pattern, I can relate many stories of shocks off of aluminum siding, TV rabbit ear antennas, lights staying on, detected audio being rectified and coming through the forced air heating ducts, etc, etc. However, I never heard of anyone stealing power as related by the OP. |
The Strange True Story of a Radio Station's Transmitter in New...
If you coil up enough copper wire big enough, you can get static shocks
off of it. cuhulin |
The Strange True Story of a Radio Station's Transmitter in NewYork State
Mike- Tho this NOT about R.F., it is about induction- Many years ago,
we had a working telephone line, from K.Falls, Or to Tule Lake, Ca. About 1/4 mile away a power line (1/2 Megavolt) was installed, running next to our line for some 5 miles ! When power company fired it up, instantly the line was unusable-- Measured over 400 VOLTS of escape in telegraph office- worse- at a detector, a maintainer (these were Fiberglass houses) grabbed on to the door handle, and was knocked to the ground ! Power company supplied us with 60 cycle filters, but the line still had too much noise to be usable! And, another incident- in Portland, had a Phone line to Eugene, passed KXL (1190KHz?) radio station- Had enough leakage, that it got into the baseband of our microwave system! we wern't using baseband that high, but when FCC inspected our El Paso, Texas facility, cited us for re-transmitting that signal, on our microwave system! Take it to the bank-- dumb things happen! Jim NN7K Mike Y wrote: I've heard variants of this story for years, but have yet to see one shred of real evidence that it actually occurred. The closest I've seen that could be regarded as 'real' evidence was a memo that circulated around PP&L (Pennsylvania Power and Light) back in the summer of 1972 or 73 that mentioned a farmer that ALLEGEDLY got shocks off a coil of fence wire he was installing. (The power right of way went over his pasture and the indication was that he was stringing a fence under one of the then new extremely high voltage lines. 750KV if I remember, but maybe only 500KV.) Even then, I thought the right of ways were 'clear' under the big lines, which makes even this story suspect. Mike |
The Strange True Story of a Radio Station's Transmitter in New York State
"Jim-NN7K" . wrote in message ... And, another incident- in Portland, had a Phone line to Eugene, passed KXL (1190KHz?) radio station- Had enough leakage, that it got into the baseband of our microwave system! we wern't using baseband that high, but when FCC inspected our El Paso, Texas facility, cited us for re-transmitting that signal, on our microwave system! Take it to the bank-- dumb things happen! Jim NN7K KXL (5000 watts) is at 750 KHz. KEX (50,000 watts) is at 1190 KHz. If your system was anywhere near I-205 at Clackamas, then it would not surprise me that KEX would get into it. Once I was driving by their tower site and decided to be funny. It was in my 1969 Pontiac wagon. I commented to my passengers that "I bet I can really get a good signal from KEX right now.." and punched the button for KEX on my car radio.. which greeted me with total silence! I just happened to punch that button while in the strongest part of their pattern, and it took out the RF amp and local oscillator in the radio (damn, that was a good radio, too...) |
The Strange True Story of a Radio Station's Transmitter in NewYork State
Brenda Ann wrote:
"Jim-NN7K" . wrote in message ... And, another incident- in Portland, had a Phone line to Eugene, passed KXL (1190KHz?) radio station- Had enough leakage, that it got into the baseband of our microwave system! we wern't using baseband that high, but when FCC inspected our El Paso, Texas facility, cited us for re-transmitting that signal, on our microwave system! Take it to the bank-- dumb things happen! Jim NN7K KXL (5000 watts) is at 750 KHz. KEX (50,000 watts) is at 1190 KHz. If your system was anywhere near I-205 at Clackamas, then it would not surprise me that KEX would get into it. Once I was driving by their tower site and decided to be funny. It was in my 1969 Pontiac wagon. I commented to my passengers that "I bet I can really get a good signal from KEX right now.." and punched the button for KEX on my car radio.. which greeted me with total silence! I just happened to punch that button while in the strongest part of their pattern, and it took out the RF amp and local oscillator in the radio (damn, that was a good radio, too...) Desense doesn't do anything to the local oscillator. It is merely a nearby (still in the same bandpass as the AVC detector) undesired signal strong enough to make your AVC turn the gain way down. |
The Strange True Story of a Radio Station's Transmitter in NewYork State
Brenda Ann wrote:
"Jim-NN7K" . wrote in message ... And, another incident- in Portland, had a Phone line to Eugene, passed KXL (1190KHz?) radio station- Had enough leakage, that it got into the baseband of our microwave system! we wern't using baseband that high, but when FCC inspected our El Paso, Texas facility, cited us for re-transmitting that signal, on our microwave system! Take it to the bank-- dumb things happen! Jim NN7K KXL (5000 watts) is at 750 KHz. KEX (50,000 watts) is at 1190 KHz. If your system was anywhere near I-205 at Clackamas, then it would not surprise me that KEX would get into it. Once I was driving by their tower site and decided to be funny. It was in my 1969 Pontiac wagon. I commented to my passengers that "I bet I can really get a good signal from KEX right now.." and punched the button for KEX on my car radio.. which greeted me with total silence! I just happened to punch that button while in the strongest part of their pattern, and it took out the RF amp and local oscillator in the radio (damn, that was a good radio, too...) Correct-- this from memory of around 35 years ago (Comm Tech for Southern Pacific (Now Union Pacific)-- Main Line ran real close to their towers! Signal came from a microwave carrier, installed as should be ( Balances wires, shield on one end grounded- had to ground BOTH ends, to get rid of signal! Also had to string Grounds from the clock tower at Union Station, a pretty good trick, as high as it is! Jim |
The Strange True Story of a Radio Station's Transmitter in New York State
"Dave" wrote in message ... Brenda Ann wrote: "Jim-NN7K" . wrote in message ... And, another incident- in Portland, had a Phone line to Eugene, passed KXL (1190KHz?) radio station- Had enough leakage, that it got into the baseband of our microwave system! we wern't using baseband that high, but when FCC inspected our El Paso, Texas facility, cited us for re-transmitting that signal, on our microwave system! Take it to the bank-- dumb things happen! Jim NN7K KXL (5000 watts) is at 750 KHz. KEX (50,000 watts) is at 1190 KHz. If your system was anywhere near I-205 at Clackamas, then it would not surprise me that KEX would get into it. Once I was driving by their tower site and decided to be funny. It was in my 1969 Pontiac wagon. I commented to my passengers that "I bet I can really get a good signal from KEX right now.." and punched the button for KEX on my car radio.. which greeted me with total silence! I just happened to punch that button while in the strongest part of their pattern, and it took out the RF amp and local oscillator in the radio (damn, that was a good radio, too...) Desense doesn't do anything to the local oscillator. It is merely a nearby (still in the same bandpass as the AVC detector) undesired signal strong enough to make your AVC turn the gain way down. It wasn't desense. I benched the radio, and the RF amp was shorted (B-E, B-C and C-E), while the LO lost only the B-E junction. This happened instantly when I punched the button for KEX on the radio. It wasn't KEX desensing the radio while listening to the other station (KGW 620 at the time). Desense occurs around those towers for about half a mile or so, especially if you're inline with the beam. |
The Strange True Story of a Radio Station's Transmitter in New York State
"Brenda Ann" wrote in message ... "Jim-NN7K" . wrote in message ... And, another incident- in Portland, had a Phone line to Eugene, passed KXL (1190KHz?) radio station- Had enough leakage, that it got into the baseband of our microwave system! we wern't using baseband that high, but when FCC inspected our El Paso, Texas facility, cited us for re-transmitting that signal, on our microwave system! Take it to the bank-- dumb things happen! Jim NN7K KXL (5000 watts) is at 750 KHz. KXL has been 50 kw days at least back to 1972... that is as far as I wanted to check it in the Jones Log and Broadcasting Yearbook. http://www.davidgleason.com/Archive-...0Tennessee.pdf |
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