Noise on the six meter repeater.
 On my  machine 53.67 in New jersey I was getting noise that was holding the 
machine Keyed up. then drop. and key up again. I thought it was desense Even 
with a big expensive
 Commercial Duplexer. with the transmitter off, the normal unsquelched Hiss 
sounded Fine No noise that we could detect. after weeks of this. We finally 
found out what the Problem was.  the 2 meter,and 440 machines next to it ran 
just fine.however They both had an IRLP link on them.  The Noise problem turned 
out to be the Router/switch.
The Noise it was creating was just at the threshold level to Key and hold open 
the repeater.
BTW. The 6 meter machine was in PL  with a Tone of 67hz...... Not a good choice.
 between the60 cycle noise of a bad wall wart for the router switch and the 
noise it created.
 might as well put a flea power transimitter with PL sitting on the repeaters 
input.
 changed the router swich and PL tome. and Problem wentt away.
Verizon uses cheapo routers. we placed the new one in a shielded box
 
Neal-KA2CAF

--- On Thu, 12/25/08, Mike Morris WA6ILQ <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Mike Morris WA6ILQ <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Six Meter Repeater Noise Issues
To: [email protected]
Date: Thursday, December 25, 2008, 10:12 PM


At 11:06 AM 12/25/08, you wrote:


Hi To All & Hope everybody had a good Christmas,
 
While the subject was brought up, I have been having a similar experience here 
at my location.
It is not on a repeater, but a simplex radio (vertex VX3000l mobile) for a base 
on the natl Red Cross freq of 47 mhz.
In the daytime the receiver is quiet and hears fine.
It seems as about the time the sun starts going down, the receiver's squelch 
opens and has a constant static noise for many hours but still receives fine.
It may do it all night, I don't know, I haven't stayed up to see, just leave 
the radio on and go to bed.
Was wondering if could be power line noise (but why wouldn't do in daytime 
also)?
Is there any interference to the HF bands like this at night?
 
Thanks,
Mike   KB5FLX 
An old trick - if the on-time changes about 6 minutes a day then it's 
light-dependent (i..e a photo-electric triggered yard light).

In your shoes I'd power the radio from a gell-cell, 
and then go flip breakers off one at a time.
That will tell you if the noise source is inside 
the house, and if so, on which breaker.

Mike WA6ILQ
 


      

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