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Re: [RFI] NOISE GADGETS

To: Tom Rauch <w8ji@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [RFI] NOISE GADGETS
From: David Jordan <wa3gin@erols.com>
Date: Thu, 11 Nov 2004 07:57:15 -0500
List-post: <mailto:rfi@contesting.com>
I agree with Tom...his experience is that power line filters he has tested make poor RFI fitlers. That is a fact of his experience.

My experience is different and I've been working in telco long before the Internet and PCs when there was just one phone company...

But I have to tell ya Tom, my ISDN circuit ran error free with numerous "power line" filters installed.

My conncection in the country is over 8 miles from the CO, all analog to the switch. I consistantly get 28.8kbps connections, better than any of my neighbors and yup, you guessed it, I've got a power line filter in the line.

I'm just sharing my experience with the reflector Tom.

73,
dave
wa3gin

Tom Rauch wrote:

The impedance of the wires has almost nothing to do with

the


design impedance of the system, because the wires are not
large fractions of a wavelength long. The critical

parameter


is the source and load impedance. In a short line,

standing


waves have no place to stand.

In a central office or studio, that's absolutely true. But

if I'm miles of wire


from the central office it isn't.


Central offices have little to do with it Jim.

The signal is often in digital form over copper pairs, and
is converted to analog at an equipment cluster near a
distribution point. You can be 20 miles from the central
office and have a 50-foot long analog pair, and your view of
life will be that of someone 50 ft from the central office
(unless you do a ping and echo test).

My specific points in this are:

1.) Telephone systems are designed to be 600 ohms.

2.) It is impossible to predict characteristics of random
power line filters, and how those filters will affect random
systems

3.) Ability to survive poor balance and improper loading
depends on what you run through the line and how far you are
from the D/A conversion, which is almost NEVER at the
central office.

4.) My experience, and I work on this stuff every week, is
that power line filters make very poor telco RFI filters

I can't add anything else to this topic.

73 Tom


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