The noise is mainly on 160. Slight to no noise on 80/40, and no detection at AM
VHF.
Regards , Kenny K2KW
> On Jan 11, 2020, at 10:16 PM, AA5CT <jwin95@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>
> Kenny,
>
> Did you whip out your VHF and UHF beams with an AM rx
> mode receiver once close to the suspect poles? That is the
> only way, and it is a conclusive way, that I have found to ID
> noisy power poles once the HF DF loop gets you in the
> area of the noise source.
>
> de AA5CT
>
> .
> .
> On Saturday, January 11, 2020, 9:03:04 PM CST, Kenny Silverman
> <kenny.k2kw@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> KC4D,N3AC and N3CW went hunting with a KX3 and a DX Engineering Amplified RX
> loop and again didn’t find anything conclusive. Basically they said the loop
> performed about the same as one of the AM radios we have that’s fairly
> directional.
>
> We’ve been looking so many times that we’re getting frustrated. There are a
> few noisy clusters, but we can’t find a specific pole or house. Nor can we
> assess if the noisy areas are actually the key offender(s)
>
> Do we call in the clusters we found ? Or do we really need to pinpoint the
> source(s) better before we ask for crews to come out? We’re concerned about
> crying wolf and/or giving a list of more than a dozen poles for the power
> company to look at.
>
> Regards , Kenny K2KW
>
> P.S. the only success so far is fixing my subject line typo 🤓
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