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Re: [RFI] My power line noise problems, revisited (Warning, this islong!

To: rfi@contesting.com, Pete Smith <n4zr@contesting.com>,Tom Rauch <w8ji@contesting.com>, <CliffHazen@aol.com>,<wb3fsr@comcast.net>, <john@radiophile.com>
Subject: Re: [RFI] My power line noise problems, revisited (Warning, this islong!) No...
From: Tom Horton <k5iid@ntelos.net>
Date: Fri, 06 Feb 2004 05:51:07 +0000
List-post: <mailto:rfi@contesting.com>
John,
 As I have said many times before...I fought it 9 years.
I finally had to go to the West Virginia Public Service Commission.
Even after that, it took a couple of years to get everything fixed.
But now, 99% of the time I have s0 line noise!
 Just don't give up, and use every tool you have. A copy of the
ARRL RFI letter does seem to get people moving.
What ever it takes! They are in the wrong!
73, Tom K5IID



At 05:15 02/06/04, Pete Smith wrote:
At 11:33 PM 2/5/04 -0500, Tom Rauch wrote:
I think when the smoke clears you'll find about 90% of the problems are
slack spans allowing bell insulators to hang loosly and have pins corrode
and arc, or other loose hardware or metal in the strong electric field area
near the wires (like brackets) arcing. Sometimes the tie wires that secure
the primary to knob insulators don't have a solid contact with the primary
and arc. Sometimes they drill holes through poles and have two isolated
pieces of metal near the primary in losses contact and arcing.


Amen. I have had very good cooperation from my power company, as long as I can identify the pole or poles that were involved, because the local maintenance district does not have the equipment or knowledgeable people any more -- downsizing. About 95 percent of the problems I've found and they have fixed were slack spans that were installed with taut span hardware -- in slack spans, this produces the exact problem Tom describes. They have new hardware that involves a rigidly mounted insulator on each end and fixes the problem right.

The other noise-maker I found and they fixed was a lightning arrestor mounted with two lag screws through the bracket. A woodpecker had undermined one of them so that the screw was loose, and it was so close to the 7500 volts that the field induced differing voltages on the bolt and bracket, producing mini-arcs. Here, the lineman told me that the newer hardware has only one bolt; in effect, they would rather have the bracket come off the pole entirely than have hard-to-find loose hardware.

My noise-locating strategy involves the car radio, set to AM, followed by a portable SW radio, followed by a DFer built from the design in QST with a Moxon rectangle antenna at 136 MHz. I listen threugh it with a shirt-pocket handi-talkie that has AM receive. The Moxon has a nice deep null off the rear that makes it easy to first follow the maximum signal, then turn the antenna around to verify which pole it is. If there's any doubt, rattling guy wires or thumping the pole will produce an easily identifiable change in the noise.


73, Pete N4ZR Check out the World HF Contest Station Database Updated 9 Jan 04 www.pvrc.org/wcsd/wcsdsearch.htm



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