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Re: [RFI] Swimming Pool Pump RFI

To: rfi@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [RFI] Swimming Pool Pump RFI
From: Steve Dyer W1SRD via RFI <rfi@contesting.com>
Reply-to: Steve Dyer W1SRD <w1srd@yahoo.com>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2020 10:55:11 -0700
List-post: <mailto:rfi@contesting.com>
I have a Bryant/Carrier heat pump with a variable speed compressor. They sell a filter unit that installs on the outdoor unit and it works perfectly. I can't hear anything when it's running. Plus it is super quiet acoustically.
In fact every fan motor in the system is ECM and it's all RF quiet.
It is possible to have quiet variable speed gear and get the savings from this tech.
It's run for 7 years now without a hiccup.
I can get the model number if anyone is interested.
73,
Steve
W1SRD
Top quality Pentair VS pool pumps generate huge RFI. Not just cheap Chinese. We have two at 
VP5M. The only way to bring it down to acceptable levels is the “brute force” 
line filter as close as possible to the pump. We use Schaffner filters in the amp rating of 
the motor. Mouser sells them about $40 each depending on amperage.
Let your installer buy and install if they will. You’ll be amazed at the reduction in RFI if 
properly installed and grounded. You’ll also be amazed at how much electricity well 
programmed VS pumps save. That’s critical for us with island power at $.45/KwH!!
73,
Jim K4QPL VP5M

Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 25, 2020, at 9:50 PM, Jim Brown <jim@audiosystemsgroup.com> wrote:

On 6/25/2020 5:18 PM, Jim McCook wrote:
No doubt it's a DC motor with a crummy Chinese switching power supply.
Or a variable speed controller for the motor. There's an app note on my website 
about building contest scores by killing RX noise. It ran several years ago in 
NCJ. k9yc.com

The first thing I would do is insist that the contractor and/mfr fix it. If you 
choose to try to fix it yourself, I'd start by winding 4-5 turns of every 
wire/cable connected to it through a #31 clamp-on. This means on the AC line 
side and on the motor side. And any control lines. These cables are 
transmitting antennas for the noise.

Also, make certain that the path for current to that motor is a transmission line -- in 
other words, forward and return current flow in very close proximity, which confines the 
field to a very narrow region between the wires. Minimum, "zip cord;" twisted 
pair is 30 dB better.

Also, I would be VERY, VERY cautious about working on this -- electrical safety 
can be a major factor. Several decades ago, a professional colleague was called 
in as an expert witness in a case where a preacher was electrocuted in the 
church's baptismal font while holding a microphone for the church's sound 
system (this was before the widespread use of wireless mics), and SOMETHING was 
not wired in conformance to electrical safety codes (the font or the sound 
system).

73, Jim K9YC
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