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#22
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On 12/20/2012 9:17 AM, Tom Gardner wrote:
wrote: Thank you Dan for your article link John DeRosa wrote: Your question is less about "I have a problem and want to fix it." versus, "I don't want any problems in the first place. Exactly. Do late model sailplanes actually have a "factory" grounding point? Certainly not when they are in the air! OK, that's a joke, but it does bring into sharp relief that the "ground" concept is a fiction (except under limited circumstances that are not relevant here). It is also a fiction on the ground as well, particularly where RF is concerned (see any book on antenna design). How do you think we should be discussing the issue? -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) |
#23
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Eric Greenwell wrote:
On 12/20/2012 9:17 AM, Tom Gardner wrote: wrote: Thank you Dan for your article link John DeRosa wrote: Your question is less about "I have a problem and want to fix it." versus, "I don't want any problems in the first place. Exactly. Do late model sailplanes actually have a "factory" grounding point? Certainly not when they are in the air! OK, that's a joke, but it does bring into sharp relief that the "ground" concept is a fiction (except under limited circumstances that are not relevant here). It is also a fiction on the ground as well, particularly where RF is concerned (see any book on antenna design). How do you think we should be discussing the issue? I don't really understand the question, but maybe we shouldn't be discussing it here. Interference arises due to many causes, is transmitted by many means, and is received in different ways [1]. A specific solution to one combination of source/route/destination will not be effective for other combinations. I'm sorry, but there aren't any generic solutions. Probably the best general advice is to have good quality equipment, cables and connectors, and to ensure the connectors are properly tightened. And even that won't prevent the "rusty bolt effect" ![]() [1] as a single _simple_ example, given signals coupling from one wire to another leading to interference, there are two types of interference, near-end crosstalk and far-end crosstalk. The causes are different and the solutions are different. RF introduces a whole slew of more subtle effects. There are _many_ books on the topic, which is a good indication that it isn't a simple problem with a simple solution. But of course one solution to one problem may well be simple. |
#24
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This is like posing a question to a lawyer: "It depends."
What might be helpful to non-experts is a typical step-by-step approach to identifying the type and source of interference and then addressing it. For you AI types (is that term still used?), an expert system flow chart. EX: If it's a noise in the radio speaker, go to step 2a. If it's a noise in the audio vario speaker, go to step 2b. If it's a disturbance in the needle or indicator of an instrument, go to step 2c. Etc. "It depends" covers too much ground. I've chased interference before, the most maddening case being hearing a French African channel on Voice of America non-stop thru the aircraft radio years ago when flying at Caesar Creek, OH. It was my brother's glider, actually, but we worked on it together. From memory: capacitors, homemade high-pass, low-pass, and band-pass filters, shieded cables, shielding around various components, etc. Eventually we drove the trailer over to the VOA facility, parked on the road outside, pulled the fuselage out, and started working. That got action pretty fast. I didn't realize VOA had security guards. Once they believed our story, and that the Komet trailer wasn't full of explosives, we were actually invited in to meet the manager and get info on freqs, antennas, power, etc. Pretty awesome numbers, as I recall. I honestly can't remember what finally did the trick. Maybe it was my brother moving to VA. ![]() Chip Bearden ASW 24 "JB" U.S.A. |
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