Hi Lee, thanks for your story! KC4D has the DX Engineering vertical array
laying on the ground so we may look at that as the sense antenna. The current
project we were looking At was a better 2m detection system just in case...
but I really like the SDR in a truck Which Jim is also strongly advocating
looking at the spectrum
Not sure if you or others asked about turning off the house power, and yes
that’s been done. The noise does not go away.
We’re regrouping on our test equipment and process. We are really appreciative
of all the great input on our quest
Regards , Kenny K2KW
> On Jan 12, 2020, at 1:14 PM, Lee STRAHAN <k7tjr@msn.com> wrote:
>
> Kenny and All,
> I have a noise here in Central Oregon that sounds very similar to the one you
> are chasing. There is a wood products plant about 2000 feet from my shack and
> antennas. The noise is worst on 160 meters and extends up to about 5 MHz and
> not detectable above that range as far as I know. It is a raspy sizzling
> noise that changes all its sidebands as you travel along the power lines. I
> tried low frequency loops and VHF etc with no success of any antennas
> pinpointing the problem. Even a professional locator group paid by the power
> company tried with no success. I knew I could easily hear the noise on my car
> AM radio at the top of the AM band and multiple trips right out my driveway
> toward the plant gave indication but no actual hotspot. I make high impedance
> antennas (you could call one an e-probe) so I put a 4 foot converted vertical
> on the back of my pickup truck with a wideband high impedance amplifier and
> the suitable power injection. I fed this to an SDR-IQ radio and laptop
> combination. What I could see of this interference was astounding. The
> computer display showed hundreds of signal peaks that varied by a very large
> amount as I moved along the power lines. This may be the reason you cannot
> pinpoint (in my case) the exact location because of the many varying
> sidebands included in the interference. With the wide band display I was able
> to drive 1 1/2 miles down the road where I could still see the interference,
> turn around and drive right to the business with a peak of wide bands of
> noise right at the power pole feeding that building. These power lines also
> feed my property. At first I thought it was their 100 HP air compressor but
> when they shut it off the noise remained. I now suspect another commercial
> device they have which is a large glue pot with a continuous temperature
> controlled heater. At least the company is working with me and allowing me to
> help pinpoint the offender. I first gave them the introduction letter from
> the NK7Z site or ARRL I cannot remember which. They actually consulted with
> someone that gave them the opinion that they indeed needed to fix the
> problem. They did not share with me whom they spoke with.
> The point to all this is try looking at the noise with a SDR radio that
> should give you a wider bandwidth picture. It sure worked for me under very
> similar circumstances.
> Lee K7TJR OR
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: RFI <rfi-bounces+k7tjr=msn.com@contesting.com> On Behalf Of Kenny
> Silverman
> Sent: Saturday, January 11, 2020 8:03 PM
> To: jwin95@yahoo.com
> Cc: RFI <rfi@contesting.com>
> Subject: Re: [RFI] Guidance on finding noise?
>
> The noise is mainly on 160. Slight to no noise on 80/40, and no detection at
> AM VHF.
>
> Regards , Kenny K2KW
>
>> On Jan 11, 2020, at 10:16 PM, AA5CT <jwin95@yahoo.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>> Kenny,
>>
>> Did you whip out your VHF and UHF beams with an AM rx mode receiver
>> once close to the suspect poles? That is the only way, and it is a
>> conclusive way, that I have found to ID noisy power poles once the HF
>> DF loop gets you in the area of the noise source.
>>
>> de AA5CT
>>
>> .
>> .
>> On Saturday, January 11, 2020, 9:03:04 PM CST, Kenny Silverman
>> <kenny.k2kw@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>> KC4D,N3AC and N3CW went hunting with a KX3 and a DX Engineering Amplified RX
>> loop and again didn’t find anything conclusive. Basically they said the loop
>> performed about the same as one of the AM radios we have that’s fairly
>> directional.
>>
>> We’ve been looking so many times that we’re getting frustrated. There
>> are a few noisy clusters, but we can’t find a specific pole or house.
>> Nor can we assess if the noisy areas are actually the key offender(s)
>>
>> Do we call in the clusters we found ? Or do we really need to pinpoint the
>> source(s) better before we ask for crews to come out? We’re concerned about
>> crying wolf and/or giving a list of more than a dozen poles for the power
>> company to look at.
>>
>> Regards , Kenny K2KW
>>
>> P.S. the only success so far is fixing my subject line typo 🤓
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