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#1
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The following website has a 1M .mp3 file of some QRM
I'm getting on 160 meters. A little background is in order: My station has my PC about 3' away from my FT-857D's. I've eliminated all cables except video so I'm pretty sure it's not coming from them. I've powered off my monitor and adjusted the refresh rate to no avail. I grounded the PC's metal case and tried it with/without the side covers. No difference in the signal. Tonight I looked at my CPU temp and it was a tad higher (127 deg F) than normal so I decided to turn on a box fan pointed at the left side of the tower case. To my shock, the QRM faded away! I switched the fan on and off several times to prove my theroy. Then I made the mp3 recording you can download he http://members.cox.net/kg0wx/index.html Listen closely to the sound - at 2.2 seconds into the rec- ording, you can hear the "tick" that is me turning on the fan to "low". Within a few seconds, the QRM is gone! Anybody know where I should look to find this and kill it? -- 73's es gd dx de Ken KGØWX Grid EM17ip, Flying Pigs #1055, List Owner, Yahoo! E-groups: VX-2R & FT-857 |
#2
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On Thu, 17 Mar 2005 23:04:09 -0600, "Ken Bessler"
wrote: Tonight I looked at my CPU temp and it was a tad higher (127 deg F) than normal so I decided to turn on a box fan pointed at the left side of the tower case. To my shock, the QRM faded away! I switched the fan on and off several times to prove my theroy. Hi Ken, You convinced me - CPU. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#3
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Ken,
Some computers have variable speed fans for cooling. The typical fan motor is brushless and noiseless, but the variable speed controller may operate in a pulse mode. 73, Gene W4SZ Ken Bessler wrote: The following website has a 1M .mp3 file of some QRM I'm getting on 160 meters. A little background is in order: My station has my PC about 3' away from my FT-857D's. I've eliminated all cables except video so I'm pretty sure it's not coming from them. I've powered off my monitor and adjusted the refresh rate to no avail. I grounded the PC's metal case and tried it with/without the side covers. No difference in the signal. Tonight I looked at my CPU temp and it was a tad higher (127 deg F) than normal so I decided to turn on a box fan pointed at the left side of the tower case. To my shock, the QRM faded away! I switched the fan on and off several times to prove my theroy. Then I made the mp3 recording you can download he http://members.cox.net/kg0wx/index.html Listen closely to the sound - at 2.2 seconds into the rec- ording, you can hear the "tick" that is me turning on the fan to "low". Within a few seconds, the QRM is gone! Anybody know where I should look to find this and kill it? |
#4
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"Richard Clark" wrote in message
... On Thu, 17 Mar 2005 23:04:09 -0600, "Ken Bessler" wrote: Tonight I looked at my CPU temp and it was a tad higher (127 deg F) than normal so I decided to turn on a box fan pointed at the left side of the tower case. To my shock, the QRM faded away! I switched the fan on and off several times to prove my theroy. Hi Ken, You convinced me - CPU. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC I would think that the likely suspect would be one that does not already have a fan. I followed the signal as it went off freq and faded. It climbed 3 kc on 40m then faded out. -- 73's es gd dx de Ken KGØWX Grid EM17ip, Flying Pigs #1055, List Owner, Yahoo! E-groups: VX-2R & FT-857 |
#5
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On Fri, 18 Mar 2005 10:27:36 -0600, "Ken Bessler"
wrote: On Thu, 17 Mar 2005 23:04:09 -0600, "Ken Bessler" wrote: Tonight I looked at my CPU temp and it was a tad higher (127 deg F) than normal so I decided to turn on a box fan pointed at the left side of the tower case. To my shock, the QRM faded away! I switched the fan on and off several times to prove my theroy. I would think that the likely suspect would be one that does not already have a fan. I followed the signal as it went off freq and faded. It climbed 3 kc on 40m then faded out. Hi Ken, I don't quite follow the implication of your statement. Do you have a dual CPU system, where one CPU has a fan and the other not? As it appears to be temperature based (the reason why the fan appears to be significant) and CPU based (over clocked for its operating temperature); I would suggest trying to cool the CPU with an aerosol (freeze mist) or one of those cans of air for keyboard cleaning. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#6
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Richard Clark wrote:
. . . As it appears to be temperature based (the reason why the fan appears to be significant) and CPU based (over clocked for its operating temperature); I would suggest trying to cool the CPU with an aerosol (freeze mist) or one of those cans of air for keyboard cleaning. You can use the "canned air" as a freeze mist ("spray cold"), or vice-versa, by inverting the can while you spray. They contain essentially the same stuff, the difference being that the "spray cold" contains a syphon tube to suck liquid up while the "canned air" doesn't. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
#7
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In article djt_d.14823$Fy.7702@okepread04,
Ken Bessler wrote: Tonight I looked at my CPU temp and it was a tad higher (127 deg F) than normal so I decided to turn on a box fan pointed at the left side of the tower case. To my shock, the QRM faded away! I switched the fan on and off several times to prove my theroy. Then I made the mp3 recording you can download he http://members.cox.net/kg0wx/index.html Listen closely to the sound - at 2.2 seconds into the rec- ording, you can hear the "tick" that is me turning on the fan to "low". Within a few seconds, the QRM is gone! Anybody know where I should look to find this and kill it? Most modern PCs use a multi-stage power regulation system. The main power supply isolates and steps down the mains power to create several DC voltages (+5 and +12 in particular) which are routed to the motherboard. Then, an on-board regulator further reduces the voltage being fed to the CPU to meet the CPU's requirements. Modern CPUs such as the Intel P4 family and the AMD Athlon consume a large amount of current (tens of amperes) at low voltage (1.2 - 1.8 volts, roughly speaking). Modern AGP graphics cards also operate on low voltages (AGP 4x is 1.5 volts, AGP 8x is 0.8 volts if I remember correctly) at high amperages. To create such high currents at such low voltages in an efficient manner, single- or multi-phase "bucking" voltage regulators are used. These are switching regulators, which step down the main voltage (most commonly from the +12 supply) and step up the amperage. They typically operate at switching frequencies ranging from the high tens of kHz up to the low MHz range. I suspect that the QRM you are hearing is from the fundamental or harmonic of one of these switching-regulator oscillator rates. Heating and cooling of the CPU and motherboard are probably causing the switching oscillator to drift a bit. As to how to get rid of it... you're already on the right track, I think... shielding and filtering. Make sure that your monitor and power (and other) cables have ferrites on them, as close as possible to the PC case. Make sure you've got a "tight" PC chassis, with metal shielding in every possible location (including screw-secured plates over any unused PCI slots, snap-in metal shields for any unused hard-drive bays, etc.). I recommend a chassis which is actually all metal, rather than one of the new lighter-weight plastic chassis with an anti-EMI coating on the inside. Don't run your PC with the side panels off - put 'em on and fasten the screws. As for the gamer-style transparent acrylic PC chassis, forget 'em - I have serious doubts as to whether a PC build in one of these can pass the FCC Part 15 tests, let alone be RF-clean enough to use in a ham shack. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
#8
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"Dave Platt" wrote in message
... In article djt_d.14823$Fy.7702@okepread04, snip I suspect that the QRM you are hearing is from the fundamental or harmonic of one of these switching-regulator oscillator rates. Heating and cooling of the CPU and motherboard are probably causing the switching oscillator to drift a bit. As to how to get rid of it... you're already on the right track, I think... shielding and filtering. Make sure that your monitor and power (and other) cables have ferrites on them, as close as possible to the PC case. Make sure you've got a "tight" PC chassis, with metal shielding in every possible location (including screw-secured plates over any unused PCI slots, snap-in metal shields for any unused hard-drive bays, etc.). I recommend a chassis which is actually all metal, rather than one of the new lighter-weight plastic chassis with an anti-EMI coating on the inside. Don't run your PC with the side panels off - put 'em on and fasten the screws. As for the gamer-style transparent acrylic PC chassis, forget 'em - I have serious doubts as to whether a PC build in one of these can pass the FCC Part 15 tests, let alone be RF-clean enough to use in a ham shack. -- Dave Platt I've already buttoned up the all metal case with grounded side covers. I even made sure (with a DVM) they were grounded. (The ends of the mini tower are metal with the front having a plastic facia on top of the metal case front). No help. The only thing that helped was taking both covers off and blowing air through the chassis. I monitor 3 temps - CPU, Motherboard and power supply exhaust air. Before the box fan, I was running CPU at 129-140, Motherboard at 100-118 and power supply exhaust at room temp +16 degrees (F). Now I've got CPU at 113, MB at 93 and exhaust at room + 8 deg. I was planning on buying a can of air and further investigating this but I feel I've solved it with the box fan. The interference is gone and my PC is cooler. Thanks for the ideas! -- 73's es gd dx de Ken KGØWX Grid EM17ip, Flying Pigs #1055, List Owner, Yahoo! E-groups: VX-2R & FT-857 |
#9
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On Fri, 18 Mar 2005 14:18:49 -0600, "Ken Bessler"
wrote: I've already buttoned up the all metal case with grounded side covers. I even made sure (with a DVM) they were grounded. (The ends of the mini tower are metal with the front having a plastic facia on top of the metal case front). No help. The only thing that helped was taking both covers off and blowing air through the chassis. I monitor 3 temps - CPU, Motherboard and power supply exhaust air. Before the box fan, I was running CPU at 129-140, Motherboard at 100-118 and power supply exhaust at room temp +16 degrees (F). Now I've got CPU at 113, MB at 93 and exhaust at room + 8 deg. I was planning on buying a can of air and further investigating this but I feel I've solved it with the box fan. The interference is gone and my PC is cooler. Thanks for the ideas! Ken, Do you mean box fan as in a small fan installed in the pc enclosure or are you using a big ol honkin room fan directed at your enclosure? If you are using an AMD processor they do tend to run hotter than Intel; I installed a second fan in my enclosure and it does keep the temperature lower. Just something you may wish to consider - takes less space and keeps your processor happy. 73, Howard |
#10
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"Howard" wrote in message
... Ken, Do you mean box fan as in a small fan installed in the pc enclosure or are you using a big ol honkin room fan directed at your enclosure? If you are using an AMD processor they do tend to run hotter than Intel; I installed a second fan in my enclosure and it does keep the temperature lower. Just something you may wish to consider - takes less space and keeps your processor happy. 73, Howard It's a big honkin' $5 Wal-Mart special - taller than the PC so I mounted the tower on stands to put the MB right in the flow of air. The CPU is a 1.4g Athlon (not over clocked). I've played with how far the exhaust side is away from a wall - at 12" most of the air just blew by the components and my MB and PS temps were not very low. Placing the right side of the case 1" from the wall created enough back pressure to drop both another 5-10%. For the record I have a 2 fans on the case, 1 on the CPU and 1 on the power supply. My video card is a bit low end (Nvidia G-force Ultra 8 meg) and has no fan. I have 340 gig of space on 3 Westerd Digital HD's that want to run hot but with this big box fan, are nice & cool now. I'm thinking it's the video card...... -- 73's es gd dx de Ken KGØWX Grid EM17ip, Flying Pigs #1055, List Owner, Yahoo! E-groups: VX-2R & FT-857 |
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