T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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552.2 | | MAGIC::DICKSON | | Mon Oct 27 1986 14:30 | 19 |
| "If they write to the FCC, you're shut down."
Not necessarily. Depends on the TV and at what freqeuncy your stuff is
radiating.
Some TV designers, to save money, leave out filters on the antenna leads.
This allows nearby signals OFF THE TV FREQUENCY to get into the
receiver and screw things up. Hams know a lot about this. As long
as the ham operator is staying in his band, IT ISN'T HIS FAULT if
his neighbor's TV sees interference. To be a good neighbor, the
ham often will build the required trap filter and give it to the
neighbor.
But if your stuff is emitting in the TV band, it is YOUR fault, Unless your
stuff is emitting where it should not, or at greater levels than the FCC
allows. Remember when the FCC swooped down on a computer show where a bunch
of cheap PC clones were on display? The clones had not bothered getting FCC
certification and they were emitting all over the place.
|
552.4 | Hide in a Faraday Cage? | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Mon Oct 27 1986 17:11 | 10 |
| I thought it was the vendor, rather than the owner, who was responsible
for EMC compliance. In particular, devices intended for use in
the home are subject to more stringent constraints than industrial
gear. There should be a plate or label somewhere on the device
certifying FCC EMC compliance. If you bought something without
a label, or from pre-compliance eras, I don't know what your
responsibility is.
len.
|
552.5 | Similar problem, right conference? | PHUBAR::WELLS | WYSIWYG folks, TAANSTAAFL... | Mon Oct 27 1986 17:26 | 8 |
| I have a somewhat tangential problem with my modem at home receiving
radio signals. It's all DEC stuff and the system manager who gave
it to me doesn't know anything about it and hasn't heard of any
similar problems. Should I post a description of the problem here
or is there a more appropriate forum? (It seems some of you gentlemen
know a bit about interference problems.)
Richard
|
552.6 | MIDIverb & KX88 owners, beware! | STAR::MALIK | Karl Malik | Tue Oct 28 1986 10:38 | 12 |
|
I took my tv into my studio last night. Turned things on/off
to learn who the major RFI emitters were.
As expected, the MIDIverb is public enemy No. 1. Even a
(ungrounded) box with many layers of alunimum foil failed to
provide any relief. I'll try grounding it tonight.
The Mac and the KX88 tied for second place. Curiously, the
TX816 seemed to have no noticeable effect.
- km
|
552.7 | EMR revisited | JON::LOW | aka the NULL process | Tue Oct 28 1986 11:57 | 7 |
| Karl,
Try the Mac without external cables. I have a digitizer
hooked up to my Mac, and when it's on, I hear loud cursing
emanating from houses all up and down the block.
David
|
552.9 | Do you have that "plate noise" patch? | BARNUM::RHODES | | Tue Oct 28 1986 13:10 | 11 |
| I mentioned this in another note. The midiverb is the noisiest thing
I own by far. It literally wipes out my TV reception. Of course at
my house, electronic music has a much higher priority than television...
Perhaps there is some way to shield the midiverb with foil on the *inside*
of the plastic box and bring a ground out. I havn't tried disconnecting
the audio cables from the midiverb - I'll have to try that next. I wonder
if Len's SRVs are noisy.?
Todd.
|
552.10 | Noise? You *dare* call this "noise"? | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Tue Oct 28 1986 14:04 | 18 |
| Hmm...the SRVs are in metal-cased rack mountable units. I don't
have an operable TV, and I don't often use my FM tuner at the same
time I've got all the high-clock-rate-devices in the other room
running, and none of my neighbors have complained, but maybe they
don't know I'm responsible *if* I'm generating any EMI. My most
susceptible-to-EMI device, the Scholz Rockman (another damn plastic
case) isn't any noisier in my studio than it is anyplace else, but
I don't know if it's a representative receiver.
The way we used to solve the "can't get my fingers through the Faraday
cage" syndrome back in a research/testing lab I used to work in
was to make a really BIG Faraday cage - so big it had a door and
you worked inside it. It was called, affectionately, the "Scween
Womb". Depending on the frequencies you're working with, the "walls"
of the cage can actually be screen rather than solid, which helps
solve some of the temperature, lighting and claustrophobia problems.
len.
|
552.12 | Guess who's on the radio... | COROT::CERTO | | Tue Oct 28 1986 17:47 | 16 |
|
As I read .0 I remembered reading a handbook on studio construction
discussing the sheilding of the control room in a faraday cage
made by lining the walls, ceiling, etc, with metal screen underneath
the paneling, wallboard, etc. Wish I could find that book.
By the way, I have a MicroVAX II workstation in my office. I also
have a stereo which is enclosed in my steel desk (faraday desk),
except for the line cord (which is also used as the antenna).
When the screen scrolls while displaying, say, a directory listing,
I hear white noise, like a machine gun sound as the characters
get fired up on the screen.
Fredric
|
552.13 | | STAR::MALIK | Karl Malik | Tue Oct 28 1986 20:38 | 21 |
| 'Progress' report -
Tried some more experiments. Grounding the aluminum foil box to
the back of the receiver (the phono ground) did not improve things.
However, yes, the cables are part of the problem. I called Tweeter
and talked with a (seemingly knowledgeable) guy there. He said
that, depending on length, high quality shielded cables could run
as high as $90 a pair!! Of course, this includes gold tips!
He did, however, add that he had some 1 1/2 ft. cable that he could
sell for $12 a pair.
Ok, wizards - how about some Rube Goldberg ingenious solutions?
Lead (that's 'LED', not 'LEED') sheets wrapped around for the cables?
Patio screen? Can a techie modify the MIDIverb? Buy cable for the
neighbors?
Hmmm, just looked at the MIDIverb manual. Not a word about FCC
compliance. How is Alesis able to sell this?
- Karl
|
552.14 | not enuf ground. | GNERIC::ROSS | untitled | Wed Oct 29 1986 08:32 | 16 |
|
Because no ones filed a complaint yet?
Have you confirmed that you are only radiating via air,
and not power lines?
If your setup would allow, why not try stuffing the
m-verb AND the cables in the box with just the phono
plugs extending out. Ground the box AND the plugs.
You could always buy your neighbors a midiverb to get
back at you.
ron
|
552.15 | Copper, Not Lead! | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Wed Oct 29 1986 10:44 | 13 |
| You don't want density (it's not radioactivity), you want conductivity.
Also, those pricey cables you looked at are probably no better shielded
than the stuff you're already using - you'll be paying for low
capacitance (not much help for radiated EMI) and exotic conductors
(for the signal, not the shield). Don't waste your money. Also
I doubt that your signal cables are radiating EMI; if they were,
you'd hear it in your own signals. MIDI cables may be at fault
(although they're only carrying 32 kbps signals, not nearly RF).
The source is multiMHz clocks and logic INSIDE the boxes, leaking
out through the case or via the power cable.
len (who admits to no expertise in this area).
|
552.16 | | STAR::MALIK | Karl Malik | Wed Oct 29 1986 11:14 | 14 |
|
Audio cables are definetely part of the problem.
Turn on TV. Plug in MIDIverb. TV goes nuts.
Pull out input cables. TV gets better. Pull out output cables.
TV gets even better.
Is there some way to ground the MIDIverb? Since there are
only 2 plugs on the power cord, I assume it isn't.
- km
p.s. I'd give it all up and become a conceptual artist, but some
telepath down the hall would probably complain.
|
552.18 | I Defer to the Expert | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Wed Oct 29 1986 16:51 | 5 |
| Thanks, Tom, I needed to be put in my place. You forgot to mention
that you learned all this when you were 11.
len the charlatan.
|
552.19 | verbalizations | STAR::MALIK | Karl Malik | Wed Oct 29 1986 21:03 | 14 |
|
So, I called Zak at Alesis. I think he's the designer. I said
'Maybe you can help me with my neighbors' television reception.'
He said, 'Uh-oh'.
Said to send him the unit and he would do something or other that
would fix things. Said he had done this for someone else. I'll
give that a try.
Otherwise, I just checked the unit, the manual (with the warranty)
and the packing and box. Not a mention of passing Class B FCC
requirements. Could they really be trying to pull a fast one?
Aren't they taking a huge risk?
,km
|
552.20 | line noise! | STAR::MALIK | Karl Malik | Wed Oct 29 1986 21:06 | 6 |
|
Oops, line noise got me. The last reply's title should have
been 'MIDIverbalizations'. That way you would have some idea that
I was talking about the MIDIverb.
sorry, Karl
|
552.21 | Hey, my music is riding thru an antenna! | BARNUM::RHODES | | Thu Oct 30 1986 08:58 | 14 |
| I wonder what Zak would say if we posted this on the usenet and he were to
recieve 100 MIDIverbs, all with a letter requesting that he shield them ;)
Seriously tho, if the cables are a huge culprit, it's my guess that they are
acting as antennas for the HF digital signals (clock, etc.) inside the box.
If this is true, then it may explain why the MIDIverb's audio output is
noisy. THERE IS NO ISOLATION BETWEEN THE DIGITAL NOISE AND THE AUDIO SIGNAL
THAT THE BOX IS PRODUCING! Sounds like it would be best not to shield the
entire MIDIverb box, but to shield the clock/cpu chips right up thru the A/D
and D/A chips. Of course, how is this gonna be done if everything is on
a single board?
Todd who_can't_believe_Alesis_didn't_put_in_a_few_extra_bucks_to_clean_up_the_
audio_signals_and_also_relieve_EMI_problems.
|
552.23 | wait. | JON::ROSS | BOZONICS | Thu Oct 30 1986 21:05 | 13 |
| wait wait wait. Theres a way to decide if it's the
midi cables/transmission and/or the audio 'antennas'.
Unplug the audio out and in cables. Send midi info to unit.
If the TV 'display' changes while youre sending,
theres a component of midi involved (it still may be
the internal processor reacting to midi, NOT the midi
signal edges themselves.)
It's a start....
rr
|
552.24 | | STAR::MALIK | Karl Malik | Fri Oct 31 1986 10:07 | 6 |
| re;-1
Good idea, but I haven't been using it with MIDI. Gee, that's
something else for me to worry about.
,km
|
552.25 | Support RFI, buy a MIDIverb | BARNUM::RHODES | | Fri Oct 31 1986 11:47 | 11 |
| I doubt that the MIDI cables would cause a problem because there is a fair
amount of capacitance on the cable itself (depending on its length). This
capacitance will introduce delays in the changes of the digital signal being
sent over the MIDI cable, and thus smooth out the edges - and we all know
that the smoother the edges are, the less harmonic garbage will be generated.
I'll bet the mortgage that it's the high speed logic with low capacitance
lines (READ: clock) that is generating the garbage.
Todd.
|