We contacted Honeywell/Flashguard and they sold us the kits. In our
situation, we changed to our backup antenna which is 20 feet below the main
which is less than 2 feet from the strobe head until the shield kit was
installed. The shield housing mounts to the top plate of the tower with the
strobe head placed inside. It's hinged to allow service access. The cable
shield is a plastic covered metal liquid tight conduit with a fitting that
connects to the shield housing to ground it. Sorry I don't have any cost
info.

 

Bill

 

  _____  

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of William Becks
Sent: Tuesday, April 28, 2009 7:34 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Computer noise in 2M Repeater

 






Bill,

 

Can you please elaborate on the shield housing used?  I have similar noise
on my VHF ham repeater caused by the same Flashguard 3000 system.  I was
able to reduce the noise during night operation by reorientation of the
antenna at the expense of a less than optimum radiation pattern.  The
cellular company that owns the tower doesn't seem to have any problems with
the RFI from the strobe lamps, but then they are using panel antennas
directed away from the tower and strobe lamps. 

 

Thank you,

 

Bill, WA8WG

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Bill Smith <mailto:[email protected]>  

To: [email protected] 

Sent: Tuesday, April 28, 2009 4:33 PM

Subject: RE: [Repeater-Builder] Computer noise in 2M Repeater

 

I have experience with several 451 MHz systems getting hammered by noise
from the strobe. These were Flashguard 3000 units. During the day when the
strobe tubes triggered once it wasn't noticeable. At night when the tubes
were retriggered multiple times to lengthen the on time of the flash, it
dropped our RX sensitivity by over 30 dB. A spectrum analysis showed
noticeable RF from below 50 MHz, peaking around UHF and dropping off around
900 MHz. In this unit, the tubes are about 6 inches long. We installed a
shield housing over the entire head and 20 feet down the power cable along
with installing toroids on the power feed inside the head.

 

Bill

KB1MGH

 


  _____  


Now. the strobe problem you're describing sounds like a potential horrible
electrical problem at the site.  In my experience an FM rig shouldn't be
greatly affected by a strobe.  It also shouldn't be causing a
problem/reaction with the WISP gear (it may be causing damage to it!) so I'd
definitely find out what is going is going on with the strobe.

 

Good luck!

Jacob Suter

 








Reply via email to