A list of "bad guys" could be effective, but Dave is right; a "good guy" today
can be a bad guy tomorrow. Also, where do we draw the line? There is a major
difference in kind between a ham that buys a device, installs it in his or her
own home and has S9 noise to an antenna close to the house, and S9 from a
device in a neighbor's home.
I would not use the absence of a device on a "bad guy" list to eliminate an RFI
source. Even a good device can be defective.
The problem with such a list is that there are literally tens of thousands of
devices marketed every year, so no list is going to be more than a small sample
of what is out there.
-----Original Message-----
From: RFI [mailto:rfi-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Dave Cole
Sent: Tuesday, June 28, 2016 9:13 PM
To: rfi@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [RFI] Light fixtures
On Tue, 2016-06-28 at 18:29 -0400, Leonard Halvorsen wrote:
> Has anyone been keeping a list of household light fixtures of various
> kinds that create RFI havoc ?
I suspect this would be a futile effort in the long run... Why?
Given that most companies are always looking for a better price on all
subassembly's-- like power supplies, what is clean today, could become dirty
tomorrow...
This would force the list maintainer to constantly recertify all items listed.
This is not a scalable solution, and as such would be worse than no list, in
that one might think a device is clean, when it is not clean, and bypass the
RFI check of that device, when looking for a source...
--
73's, and thanks,
Dave (NK7Z)
For software/hardware reviews see:
http://www.nk7z.ne
--
73's, and thanks,
Dave (NK7Z)
For software/hardware reviews see:
http://www.nk7z.net
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