And my anecdotal story was a ferrite bead slipped on each wire (no
additional turns) worked on two GFCIs that I would trip. I put on all
others since then as a precaution. Dan KI6X
-----Original Message-----
From: rfi-bounces@contesting.com [mailto:rfi-bounces@contesting.com] On
Behalf Of Phil Snyder
Sent: Sunday, October 17, 2010 7:03 AM
To: rfi@contesting.com
Subject: [RFI] GFCI
Well I had originally joined the reflector to get help dealing with
some power line interference but seem to have a different problem now. I
put an addition on the house including a new garage. Each wall of the
garage has it's own circuit which has a GFCI to protect it. I have
finally gotten to wiring the last wall. I find that the GFCI is tripped
occasionally. I have spent the last month trying to figure out why or
how it gets tripped. Apparently when I am transmitting on 30 meters the
outlet picks up that tx and sounds like an old railroad telegraph
sounder from a western. This wouldn't bother me too much except that the
addition was put on for my mother to live in and her head is about 5
feet from the outlet on the other side of the wall while she sleeps (no
she is not interested in learning code).
I have 2 other GFCI's in the garage and 2 more of the same units in the
addition of which none exhibit this problem. Do I have a bad GFCI? Is
the Romex running from the service panel to the outlet resonate on 30
meters? I could add a junction box and some extra wire to the circuit if
folks think that would help. Just looking for ideas before spending
dollars on things that don't work.
Thanks
Phil
N9LAH
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