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- Path: news.lava.net!usenet
- From: john@mlh.com (John Shalamskas)
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.modems
- Subject: Re: Dolly Parton on the Phone Lines
- Date: Thu, 14 Mar 1996 11:48:43 GMT
- Organization: MLH Consulting
- Message-ID: <4i912l$7nd@malasada.lava.net>
- References: <4i2097$k8e@intelsat2.intelsat.int>
- Reply-To: john@mlh.com
- NNTP-Posting-Host: dialup035.lava.net
- X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
-
- ted@mnsinc.com (Ted Schwind) wrote:
-
- >Here's my situation:
-
- >My USR v.34 Courier Modem drops carrier 8 out of 10 times within a minute of
- >connection.
-
- This can happen when you try to connect to certain other brands, or
- even another Sportster. But it sounds like something more is going on
- here.
-
- ...
- >A couple of days ago, while the modem on the other end was not picking up, I
- >noticed music coming from the modem's speaker. It was Dolly Parton singing
- >'Why'd you come in here looking like that'.
-
- This is the result of a modem manufacturer making a crystal radio set.
- You have an antenna (the phone line), a rectifier (some diode or
- transistor pn junction will do), and an audio amplifier to make the
- detected signal loud enough to be heard over the speaker. Nearby
- stations, through no fault of their own, will be detectable due to
- their strong signal.
-
- US Robotics should pay for the fix. Complain to FCC and US Robotics
- until you get tired of it. Properly engineered phone equipment does
- not detect radio stations! Instead of spending a dollar more per unit
- to make a decent product, most manufacturers gamble that we'll never
- figure out who is really at fault, and pocket the dollar-per-unit
- difference. After a million units, you are talking some real money.
-
- In the meantime you can fix it with a $15 filter on your phone line.
- (It costs 15$ to do it now since there's no economy of scale you'd get
- with the proper engineering in the first place.)
-
- First ascertain what frequency the "Dolly Parton" station is using, or
- at least whether it's AM, FM, or TV. Contact K-COM and order the
- appropriate filter for your phone line. Connect it to the modem, and
- plug the phone line into the filter, like this:
-
- telco wall outlet------filter---modem
-
- Connect filters to any other devices on the same phone line as the
- modem.
-
- I use model RF-1 filters from K-COM. With them I can run phone
- patches on my 100W 3-30 MHz transceiver or browse Dilbert (my hero)
- while talking to Australia on 20 Meters :-).
-
- The filters also cleaned up some AM and TV broadcast stations on my
- data phone line. I get consistent 28.8 connects with one of my
- Internet providers (the one that uses USR Couriers, of course) and
- 26.4 with the other (Microcom Deskporte and Cardinals, different CO
- switch.)
-
- I still need to get the handset line filters, the radio frequency
- energy is so strong here that the handset cords are a source of strong
- interference from TV and AM stations.
-
- Aloha,
- John (Amateur Radio KJ9U, just a happy customer)
-
- K-COM
- Box 82
- Randolph, OH 44265
- (216) 325-2110
-
-
- John Shalamskas http://www.mlh.com/ john@mlh.com
- dba MLH Consulting phone (808) 521-3141
- 1620 Keeaumoku St #701 pager 288-2799
- Honolulu, HI 96822 "Lucky I live Hawaii!" FAX/Data 534-0579
-
-