I went exploring with a direction finding antenna and my rig on batteries along
the street, and the 120Hz impulse noise near the power lines on the street is
far far worse than it is up the driveway at my house. But unable to pin down to
any one pole.
The 120Hz noise I have is worst on 40M and 30M... I suppose it's possible it's
an arcing source on a 50 foot wire, that would be about a half wavelength on
those bands, and that's why its worst in that range. But that's all
hypothetical until it's tracked down and fixed!
Tim N3QE
________________________________________
From: Topband [topband-bounces@contesting.com] on behalf of Jim Brown
[jim@audiosystemsgroup.com]
Sent: Thursday, December 26, 2013 12:22 PM
To: topband@contesting.com
Subject: Re: Topband: 160 condx last night
On 12/26/2013 6:22 AM, Shoppa, Tim wrote:
> If anyone has any insight for how 120Hz impulse noise can just disappear
> below a certain frequency, that might help me find it.
Several logical reasons that can happen. 1) The antenna radiating it is
more effective at higher frequencies. 2) The directivity of your RX
antennas with respect to the source is such that they reject the noise
on those lower bands. 3) It's not broadband, because it's electronically
generated. This is true of virtually all switching power supplies, and
many electronic sources. The noise from my SteppIR controller and its
switching PSU wipe out some bands and not others. The PSU is worst on
12M, bad on the bands around it, but not so bad lower in frequency. Now
that I've replaced it with a linear supply, I hear the controller on
the160M that's 25 ft away, so I have to turn it off when I want to work
160M. 4) The source you're hearing on 40M might not have been active
when you were on 160 last night.
73, Jim K9YC
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