Aaron Coolidge wrote in message ...
Cool, I thought that you might have kill-filtered me for some reason, because
no one other than me seemed to be getting my messages!
No, not at all, though I'm reading news through groups.google.com
which is flaky on propegation
BTW someone said they emailed me. I didn't receive it. This
email address no longer works. If anyone wants to email me
try hoeltzli at swbell dot net. Though this discussion seems
on-topic and of possible general interest so I'd just as soon keep it
on the net.
On further reflection, this may be a red herring. Digital TV is in the
220+ MHz region.
Can this kind of intereference be caused by subtracting frequencies?
Channel 2 is 54 to 60 MHz, the 2nd harmonics of are 108 to 120 MHz.
That's too low for the frequencies where we're getting interference
(124.2 is clean, 126.5 is trash)
This leads me to suspect one of the *NAV* radios. Can you physically
remove them from your plane, one at a time, and leave them in your car?
Not a problem. Can this really be caused by a radio which is *powered
off*? Because I did try switching the navs to different frequencies
and also turning them off, along with all the electrical power in the
plane.
Since I changed jobs I don't have my trusty HP 8591E spectrum analyzer
anymore, if I did I'd consider a trip to St Louis!
Oh, bummer! That would have been nice.
: If this is a possibility, how do we safely remove the
: marker beacon antenna for testing purposes? Do we need
If you've got the bent metal rod kind
Pretty sure it's a blade, though I admit the MB antenna is "out of
sight out of mind" to me.
If you wish to electrically remove the antenna from the plane while leaving
it physically in place
I'm perfectly happy to take it off and slap some 50 mph duct tape over
the resulting hole, providing it's not going to hurt the MB receiver
to be attached to dangling coax.
If I were doing this, I'd probably
terminate the RF input to the radio, as well.
IIRC this would be a PITA -- the coax goes to the antenna with a
standard BNC connector, but is soldered on to the radio tray.
Please keep us (me) informed, we're trying to help the best we can!
I appreciate this. It's a vexing problem and one which apparently
lies outside our radio guy's experience
Thanks,
Sydney