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On Sun, 27 Mar 2005 19:00:47 GMT, Monroe wrote:
I'm not up on the tech side of 2-way wireless comm's. Solely Rx only of the shortwave and longwave frequencies. But I am considering a wireless alternative to my slow dial-up for internet connectivity. The system is based around this device: http://www.packetgods.com/store/prod...roducts_id=127 The wireless ISP rep indicated that the power over ethernet line had resulted in intereference for some local HAM users, and suggested a shielded cable and/or selective routing may solve the problem. I use random wire and long wire antennas for most of my listening. All of the antennas have/will have a common mount on my metal TV tower with a feedpoint into the house located near the base of the tower (I'm also using the tower to support an FM antenna; no TV reception required). Antenna lines run down alonside or a short distance ( 1 m) from the metal tower. I have an outdoor 1:9 balun for connection to the wire antennas, a coax feed into the house to a switchbox feeding the Rx's. The balun is grounded to an 8 ft. ground rod about 1 m from the base of the antenna tower. Given this environment, will there indeed be a problem with interference? If so, are there any options to eliminate it? I think they're talking about cheap CAT 5 wiring. Not the 2.4 gig stuff. Good Cat 5 wire has twisted pairs that inherently reduce interference. If there's a problem, I'd use ferrite beads every 6 feet or so (or just wherever practical). |
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