Got any compact florescent lights in the building?  Many of those
run at other then 60 Hz.

And I've seen a charger for a digital camera that was a full-wave
rectifier from the power line, and a single-chip switching supply
that charged the battery.  It ran in the kilohertz range but had
trash from through the AM broadcast band with a very distorted
ac hum at about 500hz.

At 10:26 AM 11/24/05, you wrote:

>Good to know information!  However, I have done extensive testing with
>two different hand held radios.  The buzz will occur when both radios
>are operated with their own batteries and no external connections.
>For what it's worth, the buzz is not 60Hz.  My guess would be around
>200Hz.
>
>Thanks.
>
>--- In [email protected], "Laryn Lohman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>wrote:
> >
> > My Yaesu handheld will often buzz when receiving the local repeater
> > when the charger is plugged into the side of the radio.  I know what
> > you are thinking-- those cheap wall chargers are not filtered very
> > well, that's why I'm hearing buzz.   That may be true, but the buzz I
> > am hearing is not from skimpy filtering of the DC feeding the radio.
> > I believe it is caused by the rectifier diodes in the charger, which
> > will cause a form of intermod to be produced, which basically
> > modulates RF at a 60 or 120 cycle rate.  The level of buzz will vary
> > greatly as I move around the radio, touch the radio, etc.  Certain
> > positions will produce intolerable buzz, others none at all.
> >
> > I know, the charger does not directly handle any RF.  But it is
> > inevitably a part of your antenna system whether receive or transmit,
> > especially when using a duck on a radio.  Therefore, RF on the wire to
> > the charger, and the AC side too, ends up in the rectifier diodes, and
> > is <modulated>.  I've notices this phenomenon on other radios too, not
> > just my Yaesu, just as you have.
> >
> > I think you are experiencing the same thing that I do here.  I haven't
> > <benched> the theory presented here to prove it right or wrong, but it
> > might be useful to try some small RF bypass caps on each diode in your
> > power supply(s)...  Or, ferrite chokes on the wire from the charger.
> >
> > Laryn K8TVZ





 
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