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Old September 24th 05, 11:15 PM
Daniel J. Morlan
 
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Default Noisy power lines? BEST solution?

Radios sound great with batteries, but when plugged in, sound is appreciably
poorer. Is there a real solution to this?

DJM


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Old September 25th 05, 12:21 AM
 
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Daniel J. Morlan wrote:
Radios sound great with batteries, but when plugged in, sound is appreciably
poorer. Is there a real solution to this?

DJM


Have you tried ferrites?

Steve

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Old September 25th 05, 12:28 AM
chef@dennys
 
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First off, some radios like the GE Superadio series and other AM/FM/SW
portables are inherently noisier on AC power. Not much you can do about it
other than use batteries for serious listening. Receivers meant for AC power
only are usually better shielded and filtered.

What I'd do is plug the radio in and shut off all other power box circuit
breakers except the circuit the radio is on. If the noise persists, it's
either the radio or some other electrical device hooked into that circuit.
If the noise goes away, turn on circuit breakers one by one until the noise
comes back... then investigate items on the last breaker thrown.

Could also be a functional, yet marginal power transformer up the street, a
neighbors microwave or window air conditioner, or even bad wiring in your
walls or at the pole. Electrical noise can be tricky to find. Good luck!

"Daniel J. Morlan" wrote in message
m...

Radios sound great with batteries, but when plugged in, sound is
appreciably poorer. Is there a real solution to this?



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Old September 25th 05, 05:26 AM
Dr. JT Windbag
 
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"Daniel J. Morlan" wrote in message
m...
Radios sound great with batteries, but when plugged in, sound is

appreciably
poorer. Is there a real solution to this?

DJM


Call the power company and tell them their Pole Insulators
and/or Transformer Insulator Bushings are arcing over.
Power companies seem more receptive to this type of
trouble as modern computer equipment needs a clean
source of power, or so their PR in Transmission and
Distribution Magazine says so. http://www.tdworld.com/

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Old September 25th 05, 01:57 PM
Daniel J. Morlan
 
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Thanks for all the info, fellas... I'm looking into it.

Regards,

Daniel


"Dr. JT Windbag" wrote in message
groups.com...

"Daniel J. Morlan" wrote in message
m...
Radios sound great with batteries, but when plugged in, sound is

appreciably
poorer. Is there a real solution to this?

DJM


Call the power company and tell them their Pole Insulators
and/or Transformer Insulator Bushings are arcing over.
Power companies seem more receptive to this type of
trouble as modern computer equipment needs a clean
source of power, or so their PR in Transmission and
Distribution Magazine says so. http://www.tdworld.com/





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Old September 25th 05, 02:21 PM
 
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otayyyy,you are wellcome.
cuhulin

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Old September 25th 05, 07:03 PM
Mr. Man with the Master Plan
 
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move

hope that helped


-MMWTMP


"Daniel J. Morlan" wrote in message
m...
Radios sound great with batteries, but when plugged in, sound is
appreciably poorer. Is there a real solution to this?

DJM



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Old September 27th 05, 05:37 AM
arbusto
 
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In article ,
"Daniel J. Morlan" wrote:

Radios sound great with batteries, but when plugged in, sound is appreciably
poorer. Is there a real solution to this?

DJM


I get better reception on my radios with AC power cords when I plug them
in through a computer surge protector rather than directly into the wall.
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Old September 27th 05, 05:39 AM
arbusto
 
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In article ,
"chef@dennys" wrote:

First off, some radios like the GE Superadio series and other AM/FM/SW
portables are inherently noisier on AC power. Not much you can do about it
other than use batteries for serious listening. Receivers meant for AC power
only are usually better shielded and filtered.


Actually, the GE Superadio III is exactly the model where I discovered
that if I plug it into a computer surge protector rather than into the
wall socket I got much better performance.
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Old September 28th 05, 07:18 AM
Telamon
 
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Default Noisy power lines? BEST solution?

In article ,
arbusto wrote:

In article ,
"Daniel J. Morlan" wrote:

Radios sound great with batteries, but when plugged in, sound is
appreciably
poorer. Is there a real solution to this?

DJM


I get better reception on my radios with AC power cords when I plug them
in through a computer surge protector rather than directly into the wall.


Some of those surge protector strips also have filtering, which may be
helping.

--
Telamon
Ventura, California
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