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Author Topic: Amateur Radio Sleuthing Pins Down Source of Strange RF Interference  (Read 1907 times)

Offline corq

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Amateur Radio Sleuthing Pins Down Source of Strange RF Interference

TAGS: ARRL Lab, ARRL Lab EMC, cell phones, Director Kermit Carlson, licensed radio service, public safety, Specialist Mike Gruber
08/09/2016
Police in Evanston, Illinois, contacted the ARRL Lab, after an apparent interference source began plaguing wireless vehicle key fobs, cell phones, and other wireless electronics. Key fob owners found they could not open or start their vehicles remotely until their vehicles were towed at least a block away, nor were they able to call for help on their cell phones when problems occurred. The police turned to ARRL for help after striking out with the FCC, which told them it considered key fob malfunctions a problem for automakers, although the interference was affecting not just key fobs but cell phones, which are a licensed radio service. ARRL Lab EMC Specialist Mike Gruber, W1MG, believes the FCC should have paid more attention.

“This situation is indicative of what can happen as a result of insufficient FCC enforcement, especially with regard to electrical noise and noncompliant consumer devices,” Gruber said.

Evanston authorities worried that a serious situation could develop if someone were unable to call 911, putting public safety at risk. They also were concerned that the RFI could be intentional and indicate some nefarious or illegal activity. Given the seriousness of this situation, Gruber contacted Central Division Director Kermit Carlson, W9XA, to ask if he could look into the matter.

On June 2, Carlson met with an Evanston police officer, her sergeant, a local business owner, and the local alderman, and he quickly confirmed that the 600 block of Dempster Avenue in Evanston was plagued with an odd RFI problem. Carlson determined that the problem prevailed along a set of eight on-street parallel parking spots in the downtown commercial district of the North Chicago suburb.

Carlson employed a Radar Engineers 240A Noise Signature Receiver and UHF Yagi antenna to survey the affected block. Since key fobs typically operate at around 315 MHz and 433 MHz, he looked on both frequencies. The survey identified several noise sources in the affected block, but in particular a strong signal in the middle of the block. The interference source turned out to be a recently replaced neon sign switching-mode power supply, which was generating a substantial signal within the on-street parking area just across the sidewalk, between 8 and 40 feet from the sign.

The problematic power supply interference also disabled Carlson’s cell phone when he was within a few feet of the device. Carlson anticipated that further investigation would show that the harmful interference could disrupt licensed radio services in close proximity. The troublesome transformer was not replaced, but the building owner agreed to turn off the sign should problems arise.

Carlson called the Evanston case “a particularly alarming example of radio interference,” especially since local authorities considered it a public safety matter. “This situation demonstrates the electromagnetic compatibility problems that are evolving in an atmosphere of noncompliant, unintentional RF-emitting devices,” he said.

A return visit to the area with calibrated antennas and equipment capable of measuring the radiated signal strength with quasi-peak detection is planned for later this year. Since the initial visit, several other instances of unexplained key fob malfunctions have been reported in the Greater Chicago area. — Thanks to Kermit Carlson, W9XA, and Mike Gruber, W1MG
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Offline ka1iic

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Good for the Amateur radio ops involved and a big raspberry to the FCC...

So what's the game plan now?  When in doubt call a ham and forget about the FCC? 

More so called part 15 junk I suspect...  made in ching chang chung from designs stolen for legit R&D companies and Comchi chinkie uses the cheapest, junkest component parts ever made... 

Tell me...  can anyone expect good quality work from factory workers that earn nearly enough ching chang chung bux a month to buy a bowl of rice?  20 hour days... slave labour... sigh...

grrrrrrrrrrr...

Don't stop me I'm on a roll...  ::)
73 Vince
KA1IIC

"If you can't be anything, you can at least be annoying"

Troy, Ohio. 20m Vertical & low long wire E/W, Yaesu FT-187ND, SDRplay 2, Ratt Shack 2 meter rig, and other little bits of electronics I'm not talking about, homebrewed and otherwise... so there bleech!

Offline Pigmeat

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There's a convenience store sign a couple of miles from here that throws out some nasty interference. The guy who owns the welding and body shop across the highway always gets the blame from the local hamsters.

I was blaming the poor guy too, until someone snapped the antenna off my truck several years back. I could get about 3 mw stations until I got a replacement. On the welding shop side of the four lane, just a tad of noise. Pull on to the lot of the store to gas up and "Holy crap, Radio Man!" it would blast you through the roof of the cab.

I told the manager, not much interest, said they would call regional manager. That's been about 8 years ago, the sign is still kicking out that buzzsaw hash and the hamsters are still blaming the other guy.

Offline jFarley

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Back in the day, I used to live a stone's throw from that intersection.  And it was actually a pretty quiet location for DXing, considering all the hubbub that goes on in a typical sleepy college town.

If it were not for the fact that this emitter posed potential safety concerns, it is possible that this would have gone undetected.
Joe Farley, Near Chicago
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