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- Path: news.lava.net!usenet
- From: john@mlh.com (John Shalamskas)
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.modems
- Subject: Re: RF Sig instead of dial tone...
- Date: Thu, 14 Mar 1996 12:38:17 GMT
- Organization: MLH Consulting
- Message-ID: <4i93vj$bgv@malasada.lava.net>
- References: <beuttel.826576038@melpar>
- Reply-To: john@mlh.com
- NNTP-Posting-Host: dialup035.lava.net
- X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
-
- beuttel@pepman.mfg.melpar.esys.com (Stephen Beuttel - UC Test) wrote:
-
- ...
- > When listening for a dial-tone, I hear music (Source is FM 102.9, Winston
- >Salem, N.C.). I believe I've eliminated the Software as a cause. I do not get
- >music on the phone that is on the same jack (A good loud dial-tone). I suspect
- >the music is preventing my modem from "hearing" the carrier.
-
- Here's a slightly modified reprint of an article I just posted a few
- minutes ago in this very newsgroup! ---John
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
- What you have described is the result of a modem manufacturer making a
- crystal radio set. You have an antenna (the phone line), a rectifier
- (a diode or transistor pn junction), and an audio amplifier to make
- the detected signal loud enough to be heard over the speaker. Nearby
- radio stations, through no fault of their own, will be detectable due
- to their strong signal.
-
- The modem manufacturer should pay for the fix. Complain to them and
- to the FCC. Properly engineered phone line 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. The same
- thing goes for TV sets, stereos, VCRs, etc.
-
- In the meantime you can fix the problem with a $15 filter on your
- phone line. (It costs 15$ to do it now since you've lost the economy
- of scale you'd get by incorporating proper engineering in the first
- place.)
-
- First ascertain what frequency the interfering station is using, or
- at least whether it's AM, FM, or TV. (You have done this part
- already!) Next 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
-
- Also 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 100 watt 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 bothersome
- source of interference from TV and AM stations.
-
- I have no relationship with K-COM other than as a satisfied customer.
-
- Aloha,
- John (Amateur Radio KJ9U)
-
- 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
-
-