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Re: [RFI] Looking for explanation...

To: rfi@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [RFI] Looking for explanation...
From: Grant Saviers <grants2@pacbell.net>
Date: Fri, 26 Jun 2020 12:34:42 -0700
List-post: <mailto:rfi@contesting.com>
Any surge protectors on the problem circuit? Degraded MOV's can cause problems. GFI outlets also.

Grant KZ1W

On 6/26/2020 10:30, Gary Peterson wrote:
Periodically, I have been plagued with RFI from an unknown source.  It sounds 
like a washing machine, as far as the cadence is concerned, with a swish, 
swish, swish sound.  It will show several tracks on the 80 meter waterfall.  It 
will end abruptly.  Every previous time it has come on, it has quit before I 
could get to my gear together and DF it.  I had my equipment ready to go and 
when it came on and I dropped what I was doing and went outside.  My loop gave 
me a beautiful, deep null toward the neighbors house, about 300 feet away.

I gave my neighbor a call and told him what I discovered and asked him if he 
had been running any appliances a few minutes earlier.  He told me his main 
squeeze had been on the treadmill.  My neighbor is a ham, who has not been 
active for about a decade.  He turned on the treadmill and there it was!  
Source found.  The treadmill is a PowerTread, I was told.

I gave him an EMI filter to try, that I had found in a box of assorted 
electronic parts purchased some time ago.  The filter is a TDK, model ANF-106U. 
 My neighbor plugged it into the outlet and plugged the treadmill into the EMI 
filter.  The filter knocked the RFI down by a couple of S units, but I could 
still hear the swishing.  Next, he plugged the treadmill, via an extension 
cord, into a different outlet, without the EMI filter.  No interference 
whatsoever was heard or seen on the waterfall.

Is it possible that the wiring from the nearest outlet, back to the service panel, is 
resonant on 80 meters?  Or, is it more likely that a connection might need tightening in the 
outlet box or breaker panel?  He does not know whether the troublesome outlet and the good 
outlet are on the same circuit or not.  I had him check both outlets with an outlet tester, 
thinking that he might have a mis-wired outlet.  Both checked OK.  He is afraid to get into 
the troublesome outlet box or his electrical panel.  I volunteered, but he doesn’t 
want me to take the risk.  When I was in broadcasting full time, I was inside more electrical 
panels than I can count, but I respect his wishes.  Before I hire a licensed electrician to 
check my neighbor’s wiring, I would like to have a better handle on the probable cause.

Any thoughts as to the explanation for this rather odd behavior will be most 
appreciated.

Gary, K0CX

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