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Bob Miller wrote: On 19 Apr 2006 04:09:02 -0700, "RHF" wrote: excerpted Now be honest. Have you ever attached a ground wire and heard less noise? Yes. Remember, a receiver works on the voltage difference between the antenna input and its local ground. If your treat the ground wiring as a sort of antenna, the local noise becomes common mode* and you can (sometimes) arrange the wiring so that the junk cancels out. (*The local receiver ground has the noise added to it, and if it's about the same voltage as on the antenna input, cancels out the noise). I've done this with both my FR-200 and my R-1000. Best case was with a transformer coupled random wire (using an isolated winding to the coax). The arrangement was the ground rod, about 15 feet of wire, the matching transformer, and then the 70-80 foot random wire all in a straight line away from the noise source (my neighbor's dining room lights, I think). This worked well on one band at a time, as the level of noise and pickup from the ground side wire varied. (But an adjustable noise bridge down by the receiver is a heck of a lot more convenient). Mark Zenier Googleproofaddress(account:mzenier provider:eskimo domain:com) |
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