On Wed, 21 Jul 2010 06:38:30 -0500, Ed Richardson wrote:
>With a portable SW receiver, I foud that the control lines used for the
>Rotor and remote antenna switch seem to carry this AM intermod and also
>a lot of noise in the lower HF band. Placed a couple chokes on the
>control line (5 turns through five 2.5" ferrites) at the base of the
>tower and it reduced the AM intermod detected around the base of the
>tower. The antennas on top still hear it.
Hi Ed,
First, when you say AM intermod, I assume you mean you're hearing
multiple AM radio stations every 10 kHz up the band.
I have a rather different take on this. The tower, and the control
lines, are antennas, and as such, can RECEIVE that interference and re-
radiate it into the SW radio you are using as a probe. By putting a
choke on those lines, you are reducing the antenna current, and thus
their efficiency as antennas.
SO -- if that's what's happening (and it OFTEN does), the intermod
source may not be on the tower or the control lines, but somewhere else
out in the environment. Indeed, it could even be in one of the
transmitters that is involved in the intermod.
A year or so ago, I had some noise show up on 160M, and I went looking
for it with my 2M/440 talkie that has HF/MF receive capability. As I
passed each power pole, I moved the talkie close to the ground downlead
to look for noise. At one pole, I heard N7DD loud and clear calling CQ
on 160. That ground lead wasn't radiating any noise, but it made a great
RX antenna for my talkie!
And thanks for Q last week in NAQP RTTY!
73, Jim Brown K9YC
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