Recently we added two new food blasters to the lunch room and
noted that some office areas no longer had reliable network
connect.

Installed some isolation transformers between building mains and
the food blasters - no more complaints from the sales/accounting
dweebs, or whatever they do. Also noted that some of the power to
the lunch room does not have a separate ground wire - uses the
metal conduit, which probably does not help much.

As for the specific ID of these iso transformers, hmmm... we no
longer make this particular model.

But I am going to upgrade my tin-foil hat, as I very much suspect
that the space aliens are using the 2.4GHz carrier to link our
brains to the NSA computers...

luck,
Brian


From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]On Behalf Of
[email protected]
Sent: Monday, October 06, 2008 1:27 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Microwave Oven Interference with 2.4Ghz Wireless LAN

Except for rebuilding the break rooms with foil-lined dry wall,
metal
flooring, screened windows, filtered power,
waveguide-beyond-cutoff
ventilation grills, and RF tight doors, I don't know there is
much for a
solution.

I was told that in one major Boeing plant, communications as 2.4
GHz is all
but impossible -- there are microwave ovens scattered around the
various
break rooms running off of all three phases of the electrical
power
(120/208 volts "Y"); and due to variety of manufacturers,
generating RF
during both polarities of each phase. In other words, continuous
2.4 GHz
RF.

Except for specialize industrial units, I don't think you will
find
microwave ovens running at any other frequency.

Don Borowski
Schweitzer Engineering Labs
Pullman, WA, USA




             "Kunde, Brian"
             <brian_kunde@leco
             tc.com>
To
             Sent by:                  "emc-pstc"
<[email protected]>
             [email protected]
cc


Subject
             10/06/2008 01:02          Microwave Oven
Interference with
             PM                        2.4Ghz Wireless LAN










I have just received and interesting call from our IT guys in our
production facility. They have installed a 2.4Ghz wireless LAN
system in
our production and stock room areas, which is a huge area, and
which
includes 13 Access Points and a couple dozen wireless devices
such as
bar code readers, computers, and printers.

They discovered that they are having a major interference problem
which
they have narrowed down to the Microwave Ovens in the two break
areas.
Evidently, Microwave Ovens run at 2.45Ghz.

It would be very difficult to remove the ovens or to move the
break
areas.

Have any of you experts have experience with this issue?  Any
suggestions?  Are new ovens better then older ones? Are the
microwave
ovens that run at a different frequency? Would it help to try and
shield
the ovens better?  Please help.

The Other Brian



LECO Corporation Notice:  This communication may contain
confidential
information intended for the named recipient(s) only. If you
received this
by mistake, please destroy it and notify us of the error.  Thank
you.

-

This message is from the IEEE Product Safety Engineering Society
emc-pstc discussion list.    Website:  http://www.ieee-pses.org/

To post a message to the list, send your e-mail to
[email protected]

Instructions:  http://listserv.ieee.org/request/user-guide.html

List rules: http://www.ieee-pses.org/listrules.html

For help, send mail to the list administrators:

     Scott Douglas           [email protected]
     Mike Cantwell           [email protected]

For policy questions, send mail to:

     Jim Bacher:             [email protected]
     David Heald:            [email protected]

All emc-pstc postings are archived and searchable on the web at:

    http://www.ieeecommunities.org/emc-pstc

-

This message is from the IEEE Product Safety Engineering Society
emc-pstc discussion list.    Website:  http://www.ieee-pses.org/

To post a message to the list, send your e-mail to
[email protected]

Instructions:  http://listserv.ieee.org/request/user-guide.html

List rules: http://www.ieee-pses.org/listrules.html

For help, send mail to the list administrators:

     Scott Douglas           [email protected]
     Mike Cantwell           [email protected]

For policy questions, send mail to:

     Jim Bacher:             [email protected]
     David Heald:            [email protected]

All emc-pstc postings are archived and searchable on the web at:

    http://www.ieeecommunities.org/emc-pstc

-

This message is from the IEEE Product Safety Engineering Society
emc-pstc discussion list.    Website:  http://www.ieee-pses.org/

To post a message to the list, send your e-mail to [email protected]

Instructions:  http://listserv.ieee.org/request/user-guide.html

List rules: http://www.ieee-pses.org/listrules.html

For help, send mail to the list administrators:

     Scott Douglas           [email protected]
     Mike Cantwell           [email protected]

For policy questions, send mail to:

     Jim Bacher:             [email protected]
     David Heald:            [email protected]

All emc-pstc postings are archived and searchable on the web at:

    http://www.ieeecommunities.org/emc-pstc



Reply via email to