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Re: [RFI] Mystery Noise (Aren't they all)

To: "RFI@contesting.com" <rfi@contesting.com>, Wes Stewart <n7ws@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: [RFI] Mystery Noise (Aren't they all)
From: "Hare, Ed, W1RFI via RFI" <rfi@contesting.com>
Reply-to: "Hare, Ed, W1RFI" <w1rfi@arrl.org>
Date: Mon, 29 Jan 2024 11:51:34 +0000
List-post: <mailto:rfi@contesting.com>
<In conversation with the tech a few days ago I offered to battery power my 
TS-890 and turn off the whole house breaker.  When I did the noise went from 
S9+10 dB down to about S4, but it was still there! >

What you are hearing at S4 is either a different noise source, or even the 
ambient noise levels present in typical residential environments.

Re-energize the main breaker, but turn off every other breaker in the house. 
Then, turn them on one at a time and note any increase in noise level.  If the 
noise goes up significantly, it is likely that there is a noisy device in your 
own home.  Next, turn the breaker to that circuit off and turn on the next 
breaker.  You want only one breaker at a time turned on at a time because there 
could be multiple devices in your home generating noise.

That S4 noise could either be the ambient noise in your neighborhood from the 
aggregate of many devices or even coming in by skywave.  At most locations, on 
the lower bands, at night, an S4 noise level would be pretty typical.

Even if the S4 noise is coming from a local source, it is not likely that the 
utility would be able to locate it. It might be coming from some distance away. 
  If the specific source can be identified, you may be able to get the utility 
or operator of the noisy device to address it.

At S4, it is not likely that the FCC will take any specific action.  On the 
lower bands, the median levels of human-made noise are typically S6 in most 
residential environments and the FCC generally does not act for noise levels 
below what most residential environments endure.  Keep that in mind as you may 
negotiate with the operator of the device generating that S4 noise (assuming is 
not just the ambient noise from no specific device).

Ed Hare, W1RFI

________________________________
From: RFI <rfi-bounces+w1rfi=arrl.org@contesting.com> on behalf of Wes Stewart 
via RFI <rfi@contesting.com>
Sent: Sunday, January 28, 2024 10:50 PM
To: RFI@contesting.com <rfi@contesting.com>
Subject: [RFI] Mystery Noise (Aren't they all)

I have been plagued for months with raucous noise, primarily on 160-meters. Our 
power co-op has a tech who maintains their com gear and fills in as their RFI 
guy.  I gave him a plug at a meeting with the CEO and suggested that he needed 
better equipment.  So he has the latest Radar Engineers 243, ultrasonic dish, 
etc. But he's struggled to find this particular noise and I finally got him 
into my shack and connected to my antenna, which pegged his meter and gave him 
a signature.
The problem with this organization is if he finds a suspect, he has to request 
a line crew which usually shows up when he's not around.  That was the case 
here; he identified a pole, they came out later and said they didn't find 
anything.  This was all unbeknownst to me and a few days later I happily 
reported the noise was gone.  He said, "Huh, that's funny, they said they 
didn't fix anything." Of course, it came back.
It has a strong 120 Hz component, but overlayed on that is a lower frequency 
modulation that is frequency sensitive.  In other words, if I tune for example 
to 1830 kHz I might hear the low frequency noise (Which I have dubbed rotating 
machinery) and then tune just +/- 10 kHz the low frequency stuff goes away and 
I'm left with the background stuff.
In conversation with the tech a few days ago I offered to battery power my 
TS-890 and turn off the whole house breaker.  When I did the noise went from 
S9+10 dB down to about S4, but it was still there!   I re-energized the house 
but opened the breaker to the shack and the noise was the same as with the 
whole house turned off.
I have limited test equipment these days.  In addition to the shack transceiver 
I have a Sony ICF-SW7600GR, which with just a loopstick antenna, has proved to 
be nearly worthless, and a TinySA Ultra, that I haven't tried.
This place has a smart meter which radiates prodigious garbage within a couple 
feet or so on the Sony RX on several bands, but falls off rather quickly with 
distance.  The RFI guy has suggested that I get a meter maid out here to pull 
the meter while I run further tests.
Any other suggestions?

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