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#1
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After battling power line noise for about 3 months, I concluded that it was
a power pole problem and decided to find it myself. I got a small AM radio with a ferrite rod stick antenna (not a vertical whip), for direction finding, and started walking the neighborhood looking for noisy poles. I got a lot of strange looks from neighbors, but I tracked the source down to one of two poles, about a quarter-mile from my house. I called the power company and success. It took them a couple of weeks to respond but on one of the poles they found a faulty lightning arrestor. They replaced it and the noise at my house went down from S9+ to about S3. An improvement that makes listening be pleasurable again. I found that being co-operative with the crew and not belittling or blaming them for the fault, was a big help. I would have offered them a 12-pack, but I didn't want to be responsible for a high-voltage fried electrician. If you have horrible noise with a very strong 60 or 120 cycle buzz to it, it's probably a power line problem. Help the power company crew find it and they will take care of it for you. Al KA5JGV San Antonio, Tx. |
#2
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Nice going, you can also use a small sludge hammer and bang on the poles
until you find the one right one. Glad you got it done, I also got the help on a pole many years ago and they were glad to help. Burr AL KA5JGV wrote: After battling power line noise for about 3 months, I concluded that it was a power pole problem and decided to find it myself. I got a small AM radio with a ferrite rod stick antenna (not a vertical whip), for direction finding, and started walking the neighborhood looking for noisy poles. I got a lot of strange looks from neighbors, but I tracked the source down to one of two poles, about a quarter-mile from my house. I called the power company and success. It took them a couple of weeks to respond but on one of the poles they found a faulty lightning arrestor. They replaced it and the noise at my house went down from S9+ to about S3. An improvement that makes listening be pleasurable again. I found that being co-operative with the crew and not belittling or blaming them for the fault, was a big help. I would have offered them a 12-pack, but I didn't want to be responsible for a high-voltage fried electrician. If you have horrible noise with a very strong 60 or 120 cycle buzz to it, it's probably a power line problem. Help the power company crew find it and they will take care of it for you. Al KA5JGV San Antonio, Tx. |
#3
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Hmmm ... what does go well with fried lineman s ? Perhaps a nice Merlot ?
I'm very glad you succeeded ! I hope you make some great discoveries DXing ![]() Strength and Honor "Burr" wrote in message news ![]() Nice going, you can also use a small sludge hammer and bang on the poles until you find the one right one. Glad you got it done, I also got the help on a pole many years ago and they were glad to help. Burr AL KA5JGV wrote: After battling power line noise for about 3 months, I concluded that it was a power pole problem and decided to find it myself. I got a small AM radio with a ferrite rod stick antenna (not a vertical whip), for direction finding, and started walking the neighborhood looking for noisy poles. I got a lot of strange looks from neighbors, but I tracked the source down to one of two poles, about a quarter-mile from my house. I called the power company and success. It took them a couple of weeks to respond but on one of the poles they found a faulty lightning arrestor. They replaced it and the noise at my house went down from S9+ to about S3. An improvement that makes listening be pleasurable again. I found that being co-operative with the crew and not belittling or blaming them for the fault, was a big help. I would have offered them a 12-pack, but I didn't want to be responsible for a high-voltage fried electrician. If you have horrible noise with a very strong 60 or 120 cycle buzz to it, it's probably a power line problem. Help the power company crew find it and they will take care of it for you. Al KA5JGV San Antonio, Tx. |
#4
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Another way is to use the radio, and bang sideways on the power line pole
with a 2 pound sledge. Listen for noise on the radio. It catches bad and noisy connections above at the wiring. Best--- Ron AL KA5JGV wrote in message ... After battling power line noise for about 3 months, I concluded that it was a power pole problem and decided to find it myself. I got a small AM radio with a ferrite rod stick antenna (not a vertical whip), for direction finding, and started walking the neighborhood looking for noisy poles. I got a lot of strange looks from neighbors, but I tracked the source down to one of two poles, about a quarter-mile from my house. I called the power company and success. It took them a couple of weeks to respond but on one of the poles they found a faulty lightning arrestor. They replaced it and the noise at my house went down from S9+ to about S3. An improvement that makes listening be pleasurable again. I found that being co-operative with the crew and not belittling or blaming them for the fault, was a big help. I would have offered them a 12-pack, but I didn't want to be responsible for a high-voltage fried electrician. If you have horrible noise with a very strong 60 or 120 cycle buzz to it, it's probably a power line problem. Help the power company crew find it and they will take care of it for you. Al KA5JGV San Antonio, Tx. --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.593 / Virus Database: 376 - Release Date: 2/20/04 |
#5
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Woops-----
Looks like the age old advice of banging poles is dangerous--- My apologies--- Best--- Ron AL KA5JGV wrote in message ... After battling power line noise for about 3 months, I concluded that it was a power pole problem and decided to find it myself. I got a small AM radio with a ferrite rod stick antenna (not a vertical whip), for direction finding, and started walking the neighborhood looking for noisy poles. I got a lot of strange looks from neighbors, but I tracked the source down to one of two poles, about a quarter-mile from my house. I called the power company and success. It took them a couple of weeks to respond but on one of the poles they found a faulty lightning arrestor. They replaced it and the noise at my house went down from S9+ to about S3. An improvement that makes listening be pleasurable again. I found that being co-operative with the crew and not belittling or blaming them for the fault, was a big help. I would have offered them a 12-pack, but I didn't want to be responsible for a high-voltage fried electrician. If you have horrible noise with a very strong 60 or 120 cycle buzz to it, it's probably a power line problem. Help the power company crew find it and they will take care of it for you. Al KA5JGV San Antonio, Tx. --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.593 / Virus Database: 376 - Release Date: 2/20/04 |
#6
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![]() "Ron G" wrote in message ... Woops----- Looks like the age old advice of banging poles is dangerous--- My apologies--- I once had an intermittent problem the power company wouldn't fix. I tried banging the pole with my car (metal bumper!) a few times (it was a ham radio contest weekend, after all!), but the noise wouldn't go away. In the days before you could track phone callers so easily, I called the power company emergency line and told them I 'd been out for a walk and observed fire coming from a crackling insulator. I said I had called my local fire department about it and they'd given me the emergency number to call. I was to call the fire department back and tell them what the power company said. The problem was fixed in less than an hour. "PM" |
#7
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On Sun, 14 Mar 2004 19:47:26 GMT, "Paul_Morphy"
wrote: "Ron G" wrote in message ... Woops----- Looks like the age old advice of banging poles is dangerous--- My apologies--- I once had an intermittent problem the power company wouldn't fix. I tried banging the pole with my car (metal bumper!) a few times (it was a ham radio contest weekend, after all!), but the noise wouldn't go away. In the days before you could track phone callers so easily, I called the power company emergency line and told them I 'd been out for a walk and observed fire coming from a crackling insulator. I said I had called my local fire department about it and they'd given me the emergency number to call. I was to call the fire department back and tell them what the power company said. The problem was fixed in less than an hour. "PM" Guys, I'm going to repost my note from a few days ago. This note was intended to caution anyone who intends to hit poles with hammers (doing it with a car is stupid, dangerous, and illegal) that the potential for a power outage and danger to yourself is a reason for concern. I know how frustrating it can be when you have to deal with an uncooperative power company. Been there myself. I've been doing interference investigations for almost 25 years for the power company I work for. We have technicians who have equipment to track down the troubles and then instruct the line crews (who do not know much about tracing noise) on what repairs are needed. I can recall several hams and shortwave listeners who have traced problems down to the exact pole for us. These guys were and still are a big help to us, and their investigating techniques deserve a pat on the back. I admire and respect these guys. And some have become long-term personal friends. I can also recall some "regulars" who make false reports of arcing and burning poles just to get some action. At times, this has caused costly call-outs of line personnel and needless response from local fire departments. And many times, the source of the interference was not power company related. Unfortunately, after a few calls like this, the people who make these calls usually end up on the "bottom of the pile". Flame me if you want. I'm not trying to be a wise guy. I'm trying to stop that 1 in a 1000 chance of anyone getting hurt or killed. It's not worth it for a ham radio contest (and yes, I have been a ham for 35 years). I certainly don't have all of the answers, but at times, when I read posts from people having noise troubles, I try to email them with suggestions. Always glad to help if I can. Here's my post from a few days ago: Bad advice!! Do NOT hit a power pole with a sledge hammer. Never! If something is loose or broken on the pole, it could fall on you, injuring or killing you. I once had a lineman replace a defective transformer switch which was causing interference. All he did was touch it with his hot stick, there was a blue flash and about 5 or 6 people lost power. Fragments of the defective switch fell to the ground. Same thing could happen with cracked insulators or defective lightning arrestors. And banging on poles will usually prove nothing if a lightning arrestor is bad. If a connection is ready to come apart, hitting the pole could cause a power outage to one or several customers. Some older type bolt-on bails are hanging on by a thread after years of rusting away. Some power companies (including the one I work for) will prosecute if you are caught hitting their equipment. If you suspect a problem on a pole, write down any identifying numbers on the pole and call the local power company. |
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