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Re: [RFI] What Does Variable Speed Mean?

To: jim@audiosystemsgroup.com
Subject: Re: [RFI] What Does Variable Speed Mean?
From: Dale Johnson <dj2001x@comcast.net>
Date: Fri, 11 May 2018 15:03:12 -0500
List-post: <mailto:rfi@contesting.com>
Thanks Jim, I think I have the switchable kind then.  There is a terminal board 
that I can configure the low speed for continuous operation at a speed which I 
can select on that terminal board.  I don’t mess with it though.  

As I do now and have in the past, value your opinions and insight.  I usually 
read your postings first :).  

My furnace is clean of RFI.  It’s a Carrier Infinity model 58MVP.  It does have 
the exhaust and air intake using PVC pipe going out the side of the house.  
It’s called a high efficiency furnace.  

Dale, K9VUJ



On 11, May 2018, at 14:47, Jim Brown <jim@audiosystemsgroup.com> wrote:

You have a SWITCHABLE speed motor -- it has two speeds, fast and slow.  Think 
of it as an DPDT switch. No electronics involved.  Think of a variable speed 
motor as being more like a volume control, so its speed can be varied over any 
value from zero to high. Except that the speed is NOT set by a pot, it's set by 
sending power to the motor in a train of DC pulses (square/rectangular waves) 
whose frequency and/or ratio between on and off is varied. As I hope we all 
have learned (by studying electronics and/or math) any fast transition between 
on and off produces an infinite series of harmonics, the strength of which 
depends primarily on the speed of the transition.

Switching power on and off is a fast transition -- we often hear it in our 
radios as a short pulse (even a crackle) of noise. That variable speed waveform 
is doing it thousands of times a second, produces a continuous train of 
crackles.

73, Jim K9YC

On 5/11/2018 12:36 PM, Dale Johnson wrote:
> Question, what is considered a variable speed motor or furnace blower/fan?  I 
> have a furnace that has variable speeds, one higher speed for when the air 
> conditioner is on then there is a couple speeds for when the furnace is on, 
> one lower, one higher when demand is greater, is this considered a variable 
> speed blower or fan?  The furnace that I have produces no RFI that I can 
> detect.


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