Hi Roy,
Numerous stations in Canada and the US are encountering the same RFI
(originating from the same station near Niagara Falls). In recent years we
have encountered similar RFI on 160 meters from an AM broadcast station in
New Jersey as well as one in Kentucky that had spurious emissions up on 160
meters, and this looks like another classic case of that. I also have
directional RX receive antennas on 160 meters that indicate the direction
of the signal.
The New Jersey AM broadcast station RFI mentioned above was an interesting
one in that the AM station was using a very low power back up transmitter
that was only running 6 watts, and its spurs on 160 meters were producing
strong signals in the Midwestern states (S7 at my location near
Indianapolis).
Just FYI,
Don (wd8dsb)
On Thu, Mar 26, 2020 at 12:36 PM Roy Morgan <k1lky68@gmail.com> wrote:
> Is it possible that the interference is being generated not by the
> transmitter but rather by bad connections in power lines or utility pole
> guy wires nearer to you?
>
> Some driving around with a portable radio with loop stick antenna might
> reveal or confirm the location of the signals.
>
> Hams in the past have discovered that TVI was caused not by their
> transmitter but rather by their own gutters, downspouts or wire yard
> fences.
>
> Roy Morgan
> K1LKY Western Mass
>
> > On Mar 26, 2020, at 12:04 PM, Rick ve3mm <richardstasiak@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> > ....The spurious signal on 1830 khz seems to occur when
> > it is windy in the area and appears to becoming more frequent.
>
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