To: | rfi@contesting.com |
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Subject: | Re: [RFI] high noise level... |
From: | "Ian White, G3SEK" <G3SEK@ifwtech.co.uk> |
Reply-to: | "Ian White, G3SEK" <g3sek@ifwtech.co.uk> |
Date: | Thu, 11 Sep 2003 22:28:48 +0100 |
List-post: | <mailto:rfi@contesting.com> |
Jim Smith wrote:Ian White, G3SEK wrote: I found this out with a clip-on meter. Using a gamma-matched 6m beam, there was RF on the outside of the coax *and* the rotator cable (didn't check which conductors, but who cares). Changed to a balanced, floating feed with no connection to the boom. Result - RF gone from the rotator cable, and nearly gone from the coax. Added ferrite beads on the coax loop above the rotator (acting as a coupling loop to the driven element) - RF gone. A lot of the received noise had gone too. One moral of that experience is that the "ground" at the center of a gamma match is a mass delusion. It's actually a direct connection for RF currents to flow into the boom, mast, rotator, rotator cable and... (A disturbing thought, why not the tower too? Pretty difficult to wind it in a multiturn coil.) Without the clip-on current meter, I probably wouldn't have suspected a thing.
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