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Re: [RFI] need ideas on hunting down QRN-like noise source

To: "EDWARDS, EDDIE J" <eedwards@oppd.com>
Subject: Re: [RFI] need ideas on hunting down QRN-like noise source
From: Scott Ginsburg <k1oa@comcast.net>
Date: Tue, 15 Jun 2004 23:11:37 +0000
List-post: <mailto:rfi@contesting.com>

Eddie,


EDWARDS, EDDIE J wrote:
Nothing at all above 24Mhz? And nothing at all below 7 Mhz? Or is that just the range of your antenna system?

I never hear it above 24 MHz. I *may* be hearing it above 7 MHz but I wonder if on 80M I'm hearing real atmospheric noise and not my noise. On 40 I'm pretty sure it's my noise. I also have a lot of other man-made noise on 80M.

I'm using a log periodic for 20-10M and a 2-el beam for 40M. My
80M antenna is a single element delta loop at 50'.

You said two noises; have you heard one without the other?  Or always
together?

My other noise is a whole different story - that one I think I may have located the house it's coming from, but more sleuthing is required. I believe the 2 are unrelated.

What time at night does it go away? 10 or 11pm? After midnite?

I haven't taken samples much past 11:00 PM so I don't know when
it subsides. It is typically still active at 11:00 PM. I'll try and see what it's like at 2:00 or 3:00 AM one of these nights.


It sounds like it might be some sort of device (Part 15?) in someone's
home in the neighborhood.  Particularly due to the times involved; it
sounds like it's associated with a human's activity schedule versus
non-human events like the weather.   It doesn't sound like it would be
powerline noise, although if it is conducted from some distance away,
you might get that freq range due to some weird resonance effect.  It
does follow electrical system loading somewhat (although it should peak
in the morning and then again after work--not at noon).

Since you have noted the direction it's coming from, get a map and plot
a line in that direction.  Then go mobile targeting streets along that
bearing.  Once it gets stronger, find the freq it peaks at, then go
higher to see if the freq range has changed.  If so, go to the highest
freq at which you can still copy it.  Then keep following the bearing
and tuning higher until you're into the VHF high-band (2-meter or
higher).  Then go portable with an VHF AM-mode radio like an Air-band
radio.

I've already plotted a line and driven the streets along and near that line, for up to 2 airmiles from my house. I heard no peaks anywhere.


If the freq range stays the same, then it's probably a specific device
in a home.  Tune to the edge of the freq range where it's weaker and
continuing to hunt will help you close in on its location hopefully.

The intensity per band definitely changes. Some nights I hear almost nothing on 17M, others it's almost as loud on 17 as it is on 20M.


Good luck!

Thanks for the ideas.


                                                73,
                                                Scott

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