Jim - Interesting topic!
Have you looked into the various sub circuits?
Does the hardware have separate MAC and Net Phys? (common configuration)
If yes then what is the interface? Plain vanila MII or ?? see link and the see
also at the bottom...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Media_Independent_Interface
There are quite a few variations with different clock frequencies inbetween.
Common would be 2.5/25/50/125 MHz clocks
Unlikely to be the 15th harmonic of 25MHz from an MII but perhaps the 3rd
harmonic of a GMII interface.
 
Chris
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hi Jim – Yes that is a typical Ethernet frequency! BTW I’d be interested
in the fix!

 

________________________________

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Knighten, Jim L
Sent: Friday, November 21, 2008 2:17 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: 375MHz from 10/100Base-T

 

I am experiencing a robust radiated emission at 375 MHz from a rack containing
various computing hardware.  This seems to come from Ethernet 10/100Base-T
switches, cables, etc.  Have others experienced this frequency with Ethernet
hookups?

Jim

__________________________

James L. Knighten, Ph.D.

EMC Engineer

Teradata Corporation

 
Jim Bacher <[email protected]>
David Heald <[email protected]> 
-

This message is from the IEEE Product Safety Engineering Society emc-pstc
discussion list. To post a message to the list, send your e-mail to
<[email protected]>

All emc-pstc postings are archived and searchable on the web at
http://www.ieeecommunities.org/emc-pstc
Graphics (in well-used formats), large files, etc. can be posted to that URL. 

Website: http://www.ieee-pses.org/
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]> 


Reply via email to