It definitely IS the responsibility of the neighbor but most do not understand the part 15 label on their stuff, it ends up being on us to explain it.
Typos brought to you by iPhone On Jan 15, 2024, at 19:10, John Denison via BVARC <bvarc@bvarc.org> wrote: I would agree that as hams we try to help out neighbors who are causing interference to licensed stations, but in the end it is the responsibility of the neighbor using a Part 15 device that is causing the interference to find a remedy. I know it can be touchy when we want to maintain good relations with our neighbors, and I'm sure there is a solution to reduce the interference. 73 John Denison KD5YOU On 1/15/2024 6:13 PM, Amal C. Phadke via BVARC wrote: Thanks Chris! I completely understand. I will at the least politely make my neighbor aware of the interference. If there are options like better power supply for the lights, filters, etc. will suggest those too. Any recommendations are welcome! If the neighbor doesn't want to do anything then I will just have to live with it. 73, Amal - KT5AC On 1/15/24 16:33, Chris Medlin wrote: This is probably not the answer you want to hear, but I have heard of stories like this and the answer has always been that the ham talks to the neighbor and ends up purchasing an equally good product that serves the same purpose that does not cause interference. Or… best case scenario, the ham goes in 50/50 with the neighbor on a product that does not cause interference. Find a way to make it a win/win situation. The ham radio community is a friendly diplomatic group. Back in the day when people were watching analog tv over the air, many hams had to educate their neighbors on the use of high pass filters to keep our interference out of their tvs. Now with LED lights and cheaply made ballasts in lights, we are dealing with interference in our radios. Good luck and 73. Chris/AC5CM Typos brought to you by iPhone On Jan 14, 2024, at 21:42, Amal Phadke KT5AC via BVARC <bvarc@bvarc.org><mailto:bvarc@bvarc.org> wrote: Thanks a bunch for the quick replies. Through a truly bizarre coincidence, I can confirm (99.9% certainty) that the RF noise was from my neighbor’s outdoor soffit lighting. What happened was, a few minutes after I sent my original email about the noise, I went back to my shack to check the radio. Lo and behold, the noise was gone. I peeked through my window and saw that my neighbor had turned off his soffit lights! That was an unbelievably strange coincidence! The question now is what should I tell my neighbor to do to stop the interference, other than to never turn on the soffit lights 😊 Any suggestions? Thanks, Amal – KT5AC From: David Morefield <da...@fluffyshotme.com><mailto:da...@fluffyshotme.com> Sent: Sunday, January 14, 2024 8:37 PM To: BRAZOS VALLEY AMATEUR RADIO CLUB <bvarc@bvarc.org><mailto:bvarc@bvarc.org> Cc: Kori Rahman <kori...@gmail.com><mailto:kori...@gmail.com>; Amal C. Phadke <amal.kt...@gmail.com><mailto:amal.kt...@gmail.com> Subject: Re: [BVARC] Recommendation for noise suppression? I had an issue with noise recently and it was caused by the proximity of my laptop charging brick to my radio. You may want to start turning things off to see if you can eliminate the source of the noise. David Morefield Owner - Fluffyshotme Photography da...@fluffyshotme.com<mailto:da...@fluffyshotme.com> 281-960-5253 mobile [http://fluffyshotme.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Footer.jpg]<http://www.fluffyshotme.com/> On Sun, Jan 14, 2024 at 7:47 PM Kori Rahman via BVARC <bvarc@bvarc.org<mailto:bvarc@bvarc.org>> wrote: I have only seen something close to this level of interference on 2m and that has been from some cheap LiFePo4 charger I got that was charging my 100Ah battery. But it was about 25% bars and it was about 30ft from my 2m antenna. It does happen a lot with chargers for various batteries like shop tool chargers etc. Sounds like a job for a 2m Yagi and am attenuator. I've got the Yagi but not the attenuator. 73, Kori Rahman, WX5KR Brazos Valley Amateur Radio Club Vice-President and Club Call Sign KK5W Trustee Cell: (770) 298 8516 kori...@gmail.com<mailto:kori...@gmail.com> On Sun, Jan 14, 2024 at 7:30 PM Amal C. Phadke via BVARC <bvarc@bvarc.org<mailto:bvarc@bvarc.org>> wrote: Folks, I am hoping someone can give me pointers on suppressing annoying noise my dual band (2m-70cm) antenna picks up in VHF range. I suspect it is from my neighbor’s external soffit lighting, but I am not sure. The receive signal meter fully lights up like seen in the attached picture. The repeater was idle when I took this picture. It doesn’t happen on UHF, only VHF and only from dusk to dawn. I hear a lot of static in the received signal, and I suppose in the transmitted signal as well. Moving the permanently installed outdoor antenna is not practical and using slip-on ferrite beads on the coax didn’t help. Has anyone experienced this issue? I would appreciate any suggestions. Thanks, and 73, Amal - KT5AC ________________________________________________ Brazos Valley Amateur Radio Club BVARC mailing list BVARC@bvarc.org<mailto:BVARC@bvarc.org> http://mail.bvarc.org/mailman/listinfo/bvarc_bvarc.org Publicly available archives are available here: https://www.mail-archive.com/bvarc@bvarc.org/ ________________________________________________ Brazos Valley Amateur Radio Club BVARC mailing list BVARC@bvarc.org<mailto:BVARC@bvarc.org> http://mail.bvarc.org/mailman/listinfo/bvarc_bvarc.org Publicly available archives are available here: https://www.mail-archive.com/bvarc@bvarc.org/ ________________________________________________ Brazos Valley Amateur Radio Club BVARC mailing list BVARC@bvarc.org<mailto:BVARC@bvarc.org> http://mail.bvarc.org/mailman/listinfo/bvarc_bvarc.org Publicly available archives are available here: https://www.mail-archive.com/bvarc@bvarc.org/ ________________________________________________ Brazos Valley Amateur Radio Club BVARC mailing list BVARC@bvarc.org<mailto:BVARC@bvarc.org> http://mail.bvarc.org/mailman/listinfo/bvarc_bvarc.org Publicly available archives are available here: https://www.mail-archive.com/bvarc@bvarc.org/ ________________________________________________ Brazos Valley Amateur Radio Club BVARC mailing list BVARC@bvarc.org http://mail.bvarc.org/mailman/listinfo/bvarc_bvarc.org Publicly available archives are available here: https://www.mail-archive.com/bvarc@bvarc.org/
________________________________________________ Brazos Valley Amateur Radio Club BVARC mailing list BVARC@bvarc.org http://mail.bvarc.org/mailman/listinfo/bvarc_bvarc.org Publicly available archives are available here: https://www.mail-archive.com/bvarc@bvarc.org/