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#1
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Hi all,
I got a bit bored and started filming some glider electronics experiments. I am attempting to pitch them to be interesting and understandable even if you don't know much about electronics. First up: Glider Electronics Experiment #1 - electrical crosstalk demonstrated Available he https://RJPLancaster.net/ Best regards, Richard |
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#2
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Very nice and well presented topic. Thanks.
On Friday, May 1, 2020 at 12:17:03 PM UTC-5, Richard Lancaster wrote: Hi all, I got a bit bored and started filming some glider electronics experiments. I am attempting to pitch them to be interesting and understandable even if you don't know much about electronics. First up: Glider Electronics Experiment #1 - electrical crosstalk demonstrated Available he https://RJPLancaster.net/ Best regards, Richard |
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#3
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Dang!
Learned something there, let me tell you. I'm going to check my wiring after that demo. I keep picking up Linda Rohnstat on my radio, is this why? Nick T |
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#4
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On Friday, May 1, 2020 at 10:17:03 AM UTC-7, Richard Lancaster wrote:
Hi all, I got a bit bored and started filming some glider electronics experiments. I am attempting to pitch them to be interesting and understandable even if you don't know much about electronics. First up: Glider Electronics Experiment #1 - electrical crosstalk demonstrated Available he https://RJPLancaster.net/ Best regards, Richard Well done, Richard. Electrical interference is a tough subject even for electrical engineers, such as myself. You presentation is an intuitive approach, which is much more understandable than, say, equivalent circuits. Keep it up. Tom |
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#5
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Thanks all for the positive comments.
Got asked on the UK glider forum for a description of what the video was about. So in case anyone is debating whether to sink their time into it, here's a quick abstract: "Electrical crosstalk is a type of interference where the signals carried in one set of wires "talk across" into another set of wires. This video sets up a simple glider electrical harness, talks about how crosstalk might occur in it, demonstrates it occurring and illustrates the magnitude of the consequences to the pilot." Best regards, Richard |
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#6
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Nice demo of cross talk. Last year I fixed a problem in our glider where the microphone wires were not completely shielded, as in your demo, and were picking up signal from the radio speaker wires, also not completely shielded. The result was intermittently the radio would squeal during transmit due to feedback from the speaker back into the microphone. It was intermittent due to the wires shifting slightly every time the canopy opened/closed. Shielding both the speaker and microphone wires fixed the problem.
Rich L. |
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#7
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On Saturday, 2 May 2020 14:41:54 UTC+1, Richard Livingston wrote:
It was intermittent due to the wires shifting slightly every time the canopy opened/closed. Shielding both the speaker and microphone wires fixed the problem. Setting up these experiments I was intriged by how much small relative movements in the cables when they are bundled together, even at a single point in the cable run, can change the crosstalk. Will try to show that and the effect of distance in the next video if I can pull off a clean demo. Richard |
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#8
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On Saturday, May 2, 2020 at 9:41:54 AM UTC-4, Richard Livingston wrote:
Nice demo of cross talk. Last year I fixed a problem in our glider where the microphone wires were not completely shielded, as in your demo, and were picking up signal from the radio speaker wires, also not completely shielded. The result was intermittently the radio would squeal during transmit due to feedback from the speaker back into the microphone. It was intermittent due to the wires shifting slightly every time the canopy opened/closed. Shielding both the speaker and microphone wires fixed the problem. Rich L. Such feedback could only occur if the radio had the (mis)feature of echoing the signal from the mic to the speaker. Kind of lets you know you've got the PTT pressed and it's all working, but not really necessary. With that happening, you may also get acoustic feedback, from the speaker back into the mic, even without crosstalk in the wiring. Maybe that feature can be turned off somewhere in the radio's settings? |
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#9
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#10
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On Sunday, 3 May 2020 11:30:04 UTC+1, Tim Newport-Peace wrote:
The section on supressing cross-talk is going to be interesting because there are so many possible causes. Experiment #2 is just going to look at the effect of cable type on the type of noise seen in experiment #1. Experiment #3 on-wards, if I manage to keep making them, will look at other types of noise. Best regards, Richard |
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