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#1
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Today I saw a Time Warner Cable minivan trolling through the neighborhood.
It appeared to have a four antenna DF array on the roof with vertical lengths of about 2-3 feet. What's up with that? |
#2
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On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 08:41:02 -0700, "Wayne"
wrote: Today I saw a Time Warner Cable minivan trolling through the neighborhood. It appeared to have a four antenna DF array on the roof with vertical lengths of about 2-3 feet. What's up with that? It's a doppler direction finder array, used to locate cable leaks and ingres (leakage into the cable). Something like these perahaps: http://kn2c.us/radio-df-ddf2020t/ http://www.wavetracker.com http://www.google.com/patents/US6801162 -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#3
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![]() "Jeff Liebermann" wrote in message ... On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 08:41:02 -0700, "Wayne" wrote: Today I saw a Time Warner Cable minivan trolling through the neighborhood. It appeared to have a four antenna DF array on the roof with vertical lengths of about 2-3 feet. What's up with that? # It's a doppler direction finder array, used to locate cable leaks and # ingres (leakage into the cable). Something like these perahaps: # http://kn2c.us/radio-df-ddf2020t/ # http://www.wavetracker.com # http://www.google.com/patents/US6801162 Ah yes, mystery solved. The antenna array looked exactly like a "Wavetracker". Thanks Wayne W5GIE Redlands, CA |
#4
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![]() "Jeff Liebermann" wrote in message ... On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 08:41:02 -0700, "Wayne" wrote: Today I saw a Time Warner Cable minivan trolling through the neighborhood. It appeared to have a four antenna DF array on the roof with vertical lengths of about 2-3 feet. What's up with that? It's a doppler direction finder array, used to locate cable leaks and ingres (leakage into the cable). Something like these perahaps: I didn't see the Cox survey van on my street but their tech paid me a visit. I didn't appreciate the extent of it but my interior cabling was leaking. The tech came to the door and said he had to do some testing on the pole that would knock out all our services for a few minutes. Was that OK? (Yes) He reported that my house was the source of leakage that had earlier been detected by their vehicle. (Oops) He asked if we had any broadcast ingress. (Yes) Could he fix things inside the house? (Heck yes) He spent over an hour reterminating some of my old stuff and running a few new pieces for me. That got the leakage within limits and it made the ingress go away. (Yay) "Sal" |
#5
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Sal salmonella@food wrote:
"Jeff Liebermann" wrote in message ... On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 08:41:02 -0700, "Wayne" wrote: Today I saw a Time Warner Cable minivan trolling through the neighborhood. It appeared to have a four antenna DF array on the roof with vertical lengths of about 2-3 feet. What's up with that? It's a doppler direction finder array, used to locate cable leaks and ingres (leakage into the cable). Something like these perahaps: I didn't see the Cox survey van on my street but their tech paid me a visit. I didn't appreciate the extent of it but my interior cabling was leaking. The tech came to the door and said he had to do some testing on the pole that would knock out all our services for a few minutes. Was that OK? (Yes) He reported that my house was the source of leakage that had earlier been detected by their vehicle. (Oops) He asked if we had any broadcast ingress. (Yes) Could he fix things inside the house? (Heck yes) He spent over an hour reterminating some of my old stuff and running a few new pieces for me. That got the leakage within limits and it made the ingress go away. (Yay) "Sal" And all that in the house of (supposedly) a radio amateur? Over here the house cabling is the responsibility of the inhabitant. The cabling company delivers signal to a demarcation point, in new houses usually in the electricity metering cabinet, in older houses that were later retrofitted with cable it is often on the outside wall of the living room. Anything connected there you have to supply and maintain yourself. The inhouse cabling and especially the connectors have been very substandard at the time the cable network was deployed, which wasn't a problem because there were few channels and they were positioned carefully not to overlap with terrestrial transmission in the area. But when the DVB-T network was deployed, new channels were used (there was parallal Analog and DVB-T transmission for a while) and the cable networks were fully allocated. So you often got a DVB-T transmitter on the same channel as an analog cable channel, and those DVB-T transmitters are in the cities instead of the usually more remote sites where the Analog transmitters were. Big trouble ensued, and everyone (who cares about picture quality) was forced to buy new cabling and at least new connectors, that were actually providing shielding. This was a big boon for radio amateurs, because it reduced the amount of all interference, not only from DVB-T to viewers but also from radio amateurs to viewers and from the cable network to radio amateurs. (on the cable network, channels are in use that overlap with the 2m and 70cm amateur bands) |
#6
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On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 23:24:20 -0700, "Sal" salmonella@food
poisoning.org wrote: He spent over an hour reterminating some of my old stuff and running a few new pieces for me. That got the leakage within limits and it made the ingress go away. (Yay) I've had to deal with cable leakage problems generating interference to commercial services. Cable CH18 also covers the 2m band. "Interference Report Card" http://www.cablefax.com/tech/operations/bestpractices/14955.html http://www.cablefax.com/tech/sections/columns/broadband/42840.html Most of the time, it's the ring type crimp F connectors like this: http://www.showmecables.com/images/catalog/product/F-Type-Connector-With-1-4-Inch-Crimp-Ring-RG59-4.jpg that caused problems. Occasionally, some really bad RG-59/u with maybe 50% coverage on the shield. Other times, it various cable amplifiers, splitters, and devices, usually with unterminated ends or ports. Lots of ways to do it wrong. So, what did the Cox guy find? I'm nosey. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#7
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On 8/28/2013 11:42 AM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 23:24:20 -0700, "Sal" salmonella@food poisoning.org wrote: He spent over an hour reterminating some of my old stuff and running a few new pieces for me. That got the leakage within limits and it made the ingress go away. (Yay) I've had to deal with cable leakage problems generating interference to commercial services. Cable CH18 also covers the 2m band. "Interference Report Card" http://www.cablefax.com/tech/operations/bestpractices/14955.html http://www.cablefax.com/tech/sections/columns/broadband/42840.html Most of the time, it's the ring type crimp F connectors like this: http://www.showmecables.com/images/catalog/product/F-Type-Connector-With-1-4-Inch-Crimp-Ring-RG59-4.jpg that caused problems. What type/style F connector would you recommend? John KD5YI |
#8
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![]() "Jeff Liebermann" wrote in message ... snip So, what did the Cox guy find? I'm nosey. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 It was almost all leakage from ring-crimp connectors. (Your comments contained your own answer :-) He replaced them with compression connectors, probably the Snap-n-Seal from Belden. I had a couple of pieces of RG-59 that he changed in favor of a better cable from a spool he brought. Most of my runs were Belden 9275, which he said was fine -- if terminated properly. "Sal" |
#9
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![]() "Rob" wrote in message ... He reported that my house was the source of leakage that had earlier been detected by their vehicle. (Oops) He asked if we had any broadcast ingress. (Yes) Could he fix things inside the house? (Heck yes) He spent over an hour reterminating some of my old stuff and running a few new pieces for me. That got the leakage within limits and it made the ingress go away. (Yay) "Sal" And all that in the house of (supposedly) a radio amateur? Oh, it's even worse than that -- way worse. :-( Yes, I'm a licensed amateur, Extra Class, even. In February, 2007, I passed the Extra Exam on my first try without ever cracking a book. I'm a retired engineer and I knew much of the technical stuff. I could afford some misses on rules and still pass. I had studied for General because I wanted at least General. I figured Extra could come later. As it worked out, "later" was only about half an hour. But it's even worse than that -- way worse. :-( A major chunk of my working life was spent dealing with EMI detection and correction. I was certified as an EMI Engineer by the National Association of Radio and Telecommunications Engineers. I'd had to find and solve a whole lot of "tough dogs" in my working life. I just hadn't bothered at home. I always seemed to have something else to do. Okay, now that I've humbled myself, you may proceed to bash me. Bashers are requested to summarize their experience and involvement. Humor is allowed. "Sal" KD6VKW (KILO-DELTA-SIX-VICIOUS-KILLER-WEASEL) B.S., Chapman University, 1989, Electronics Volunteer Examiner Emergency Services Volunteer (RACES) Past President of South Bay Amateur Radio Society, SOBARS Past Field Day Chairman of SOBARS Past Treasurer of SOBARS SOBARS repeater repairman SOBARS weekly HF net control operator Recovering Sailor, USN 21 yrs. Elmer of many Enemy of none Newsgroup fun-lover All-around good-guy |
#10
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Sal salmonella@food wrote:
"Rob" wrote in message ... He reported that my house was the source of leakage that had earlier been detected by their vehicle. (Oops) He asked if we had any broadcast ingress. (Yes) Could he fix things inside the house? (Heck yes) He spent over an hour reterminating some of my old stuff and running a few new pieces for me. That got the leakage within limits and it made the ingress go away. (Yay) "Sal" And all that in the house of (supposedly) a radio amateur? Oh, it's even worse than that -- way worse. :-( I often heard that IT is worst within IT companies :-) |
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