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#1
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I'm using a Stridsberg antenna multicoupler to connect three scanners
to the same beam antenna. The audio of each of the three scanners is fed to the line input of three separate computers. After I connected the scanners to the multicoupler I noticed that in the audio of each of the scanners you can hear the audio of the other two scanners (but at a much lower volume). If I disconnect the scanners from the multicoupler and switch to separate antennas the problem goes away. Is there something I can do to prevent the audio from each scanner completely separate from the other two scanners? Thanks for any suggestions, Gordon -- Listen to Gwinnett County, Georgia Police, Fire, and EMS radio at http://www.ScanGwinnett.com |
#3
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My intuition is that it's a ground loop in the audio path. Try
unplugging audio from the other computers and see what happens. If the crosstalk goes away, I'd try a radio shack audio isolation transformer ($15) in the audio lines to the computers. Ground Loop Isolator 270-054 -- Ron Hardin On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. |
#4
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I've had the same problem, but was only using two computers. It was a
ground loop. Simple take a heavy gauge wire (12 in my case) and ground each computer chassie to eachother then ground that to the Stridsberg multicoupler. In my case I didn't need to physically ground the cases of the scanners as that was already taken care of my the outer sheld of the coax between the scanner & stridsberg. Someone mentioned terminating the unused Stridsberg output. I have 2 of the amplified 4 port multicouplers and 1 of the 8 port amplified couplers and never terminated unused ports so in my case that wasn't an issue. George - Daytona Beach, FL - KI4FIA Look Me Up On IRPL Node 4053 or Echo Link 50666 http://www.MilAirComms.com |
#5
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On Fri, 09 Jul 2004 15:42:27 GMT, Ron Hardin
wrote: My intuition is that it's a ground loop in the audio path. Try unplugging audio from the other computers and see what happens. If the crosstalk goes away, I'd try a radio shack audio isolation transformer ($15) in the audio lines to the computers. Ground Loop Isolator 270-054 Ground loops produce hum, not usually cross-talk audio. Try the cheap radio shack isolator first. If that doesn't work try the Royal PAD. Royal DB-25 attenuation boxes with ground lift solve most of the audio problems I've had. www.guitarcenter.com |
#6
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On Fri, 09 Jul 2004 15:42:27 GMT, Ron Hardin
wrote: My intuition is that it's a ground loop in the audio path. Try unplugging audio from the other computers and see what happens. If the crosstalk goes away, I'd try a radio shack audio isolation transformer ($15) in the audio lines to the computers. Ground Loop Isolator 270-054 Thanks all, the problem was a ground loop. Radio Shack's ground loop isolators did the trick, all of the crosstalk is gone! Thanks, Gordon |
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