Different Noise Thresholds
Dear All,
I tried with different antennas (same locations) but nothing. There are some thresholds of noise as in picture on 3,5MHZ, 5MHz and 14MHz. Without the antenna (I tried, hi!) there is a uniform white noise.
Any suggestions? Is it the same also for your stations?
You can check at www.iz3eaw.it
Regards,
Giulio IZ3EAW
Attachments:
https://forum.kiwisdr.com/uploads/Uploader/e0/8de988c393fd85584164e4438f119b.png
https://forum.kiwisdr.com/uploads/Uploader/ea/3c1847b43b572a1e775656cd59bf2e.png
https://forum.kiwisdr.com/uploads/Uploader/7f/f2e52bcf78a6a2c0c8220f2cc0dcd3.png
I tried with different antennas (same locations) but nothing. There are some thresholds of noise as in picture on 3,5MHZ, 5MHz and 14MHz. Without the antenna (I tried, hi!) there is a uniform white noise.
Any suggestions? Is it the same also for your stations?
You can check at www.iz3eaw.it
Regards,
Giulio IZ3EAW
Attachments:
https://forum.kiwisdr.com/uploads/Uploader/e0/8de988c393fd85584164e4438f119b.png
https://forum.kiwisdr.com/uploads/Uploader/ea/3c1847b43b572a1e775656cd59bf2e.png
https://forum.kiwisdr.com/uploads/Uploader/7f/f2e52bcf78a6a2c0c8220f2cc0dcd3.png
Comments
The second screenshot has a suspicious looking abrupt left edge on the noise pedestal at 5.24 MHz. That is quite possibly interference from VDSL Internet service.
Attachments:
https://forum.kiwisdr.com/uploads/Uploader/2e/40e3e4215de05674619dc90c791334.png
https://forum.kiwisdr.com/uploads/Uploader/83/a088a04ee0a4020916f989c8f425dc.png
I had the same problem and the authorities found a broken overhead line. After they fixed it, the noise was gone.
Now all I have to do is ask you a new and very dangerous question: how can I understand what are the sources of QRM?
I've already disconnected all the household appliances, nothing. nothing changes at all. I just inserted a mains filter on the SDR power supply, nothing. How do you advise me to proceed?
I'm building 4 crossed loops with LZ1AQ pre-amp, maybe this setup can cancel the noise, what do you think?
Thank you,
Giulio IZ3EAW
That does assume your interference is coming from one direction.
I made a four-loop antenna LZ1AQ from RG 213 flexible coax loops and the noise cancelling was less efficient than two solid aluminium loops I am pretty sure that is because the loops were not held in alignment very well.
When routers are setting up VDSL connections the signal is different, if you have houses close by it is fairly safe to assume the one rebooting is the one with lights on and someone cussing ;-).
Here i assume every bit of copper is going to inject noise into the SDR, buy some clip on ferrite sets, make sure you have a bunch of oversize 11-13mm ones in there as a few loops through that will be more affective than a couple of small exact size clip-on's. Break up all the runs of copper with ferrite, watching the waterfall as you go. The biggest sinks are often the easist to find as they respond well to damping.
Also it is good to have somewhere to dump the RF energy if you can, I've gone over to running the CAT5 feed inside microbore copper for a decent length so that there is an earth connection at either end and the feed is protected from burial and extra shielded, waterproof the ends with mini IP67 junction boxes with glands that take 6-10mm.
The microbore is only for short runs obviously, most people with log runs can move the antenna away from the QRM source.
NEWS: I went to my neighbor, with whom I have good relations. I asked him to turn off the devices and power supplies he had turned on one by one. Well ... the 68kHz problem is solved: it was a switching power supply (which I changed at my expense) of the cordless.
The problem with the VSDL remains, which I really don't know how to solve it (especially for 14MHz noise).
Thank you again,
Giulio
Attachments:
https://forum.kiwisdr.com/uploads/Uploader/29/b6065ded95df9db482980313cb554d.png
https://forum.kiwisdr.com/uploads/Uploader/e3/1728a3f0b6bbb7746144542ce8db71.png
https://forum.kiwisdr.com/uploads/Uploader/76/4f154a82cf0cda4c33d3ecfc18cf33.png
Attachments:
https://forum.kiwisdr.com/uploads/Uploader/59/70b512d103e5037d4dcfea6e305ead.png
https://forum.kiwisdr.com/uploads/Uploader/76/95750dbe4a31a8ac5df0313db51380.png
If the VDSL is coming from overhead lines getting it on a well balanced pair should help data throughput and reduce radiation. ADSL and VDSL can sometimes work with one wire only, it radiates badly and is slow but can work so faults (plus noise) can gradually build before eventual complete failure. Here in the UK there is priority given to voice calls so if the voice service is crackly report that, data is secondary and much harder to get companies to address. Also VDSL should only be present on the socket the router is using, if there are hard wired extensions it's best to make sure VDSL filters are dropping the data frequencies where not required (also helps throughput). UK land lines have a newer master socket supplied that filter the data off and tries to reduce wiring to extensions for signal integrity but that helps us too.
I think that the problem is on my router: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1PrXrEtvKZnQYzwzKBrEw8Hl5rYd-ZnJ0
Giulio
2. Put clip on ferrite on leads
3. Get a different router