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Radio Squelch - Electrical Noise Problems
On Tuesday, June 12, 2018 at 11:30:06 AM UTC-4, Maxx Ruff wrote:
At 10:39 12 June 2018, Chris Wedgwood wrote: It would be helpful to detail what you've done, what equipment is there, etc I generally try to modify wiring to comply with John DeRosa's excellent presentations. I haven't found much on his or any other website about radio interference but would be pleased to be corrected. http://aviation.derosaweb.net/presentations/#wiring I have checked for poor batteries, undersized cables, loose or voltage drops on connectors, fuses, circuit breakers, switches, terminal blocks and earthing. I've separated (physically and electrically) as best as reasonably possible, the wiring of the radio from other wiring. I've placed solid ferrites on power wiring to the radio and each instrument. I've put split ferrites on data, display, memory card and radio mic/spr/ ptt cables. I took the ferrites back off the memory card cables as I seemed to have more trouble with the cards while the ferrites were present (but this may have been caused by people corrupting the cards in a mac pc). The ' primary culprit' often seems to be the Flarm, especially during the first minute after the master switch is turned on when everything is initializing. A hand held radio seems to confirm this. The interference seems to be worse at higher frequencies with 122.7Mhz being a bit better than above 130Mhz. I haven't tried "a 12v interference suppression capacitor" across the radio leads, will order some. Also ordering some copper foil to wrap around the flarms (or to make a protective hat) I'm not sure if its a good idea to clip a ferrite onto the flarm GPS antenna lead or the radio antenna lead, suggestions are welcome. Theoretically a ferrite ring around the antenna's coaxial cable should not affect anything. But if it does, that means there is something wrong with the antenna (such as a broken wire inside) that causes radio waves to be radiated from the coaxial cable itself. That is an issue with transmission, e.g., from the radio, or the FLARM's transmission antenna. The GPS only receives. If the "GPS antenna" is actually a complete GPS receiver that sends the processed data through its cable, that's a different situation, and a ferrite ring on that may help. BTW running a cable through a ferrite ring twice (looped) is four times more effective than once, as far as the impedance it puts in the way of unwanted radio emissions. (And 3 times is 9x as effective.) Easy to do with a split ring that is large enough, if you have slack in the cable. |
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