BrockN
Well-known member
- First Name
- Brock
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2025
- Threads
- 7
- Messages
- 413
- Reaction score
- 621
- Location
- Kamloops BC Canada
- Vehicles
- '24 FS Cybertruck, '23 MY, '15 MS
- Occupation
- Engineer
- Thread starter
- #1
This won't be of interest to most of us, but anyone with Amateur Radio gear or anyone needing a two way radio for backcountry travel or perhaps work, might find this relevant.
When I installed my VHF radio in the truck, I was initially happy with what I thought was a fairly quiet truck. I didn't hear any birdies I typically have come to expect from computers and inverters. But then I noticed that weaker signals often had noise on them... just a seemingly higher noise floor with random static. So I got out my trusty TinySA Ultra and sniffed around a little.
I did not see any obvious noise on the display, but then I set it to also show a waterfall. At that point I realized that I could cause seemingly random noise to appear when I turned on the 120 Volt outlets. This is what I saw:
The lower part of the waterfall (blue background) is with the outlets off. The upper area is with them on. Next step was to power my radio from a LiFePO4 battery, to take my 120 V power supply out of the equation. This video shows the radio powered by the battery, with nothing plugged into any of the sockets. Sockets are on at the beginning, get switched off and then back on again. Note the background noise that pops on and off with the sockets:
When I scanned around with the spectrum analyzer to find the VHF noise, I hadn't seen evidence of any significant noise on the lower bands, except for 10 meters (28 MHz). I was out on my rural property a few days ago and decided to see how HF sounded in a very low noise environment. The noise floor out there is about an S1 (!), which is heavenly... I bolted on the old screwdriver antenna I have, to the hitch assembly and grounded it to the truck body. Recognizing that the socket system is noisy, I powered my little FT-817ND from my trusty battery. Happily, the noise floor was almost non-existent, except for a regular 'tick' that might be the radio attempting to charge the non-existent internal battery. Or maybe the truck is the source, looking for a Bluetooth signal or something. Anyway, it was something I could live with. But then I unlocked the door and the big battery contactor engaged.... as in this video:
Definitely not good! S1 to S8 instantly!
What I haven't tried yet is to see whether the 48 Volt system also creates noise like the 120 V system does. I'm cautiously optimistic that it might not, given there's no AC waveform being constructed. But given the general noise emanating from the vehicle itself, maybe I'll be disappointed.
Has anyone else done any testing like this? If so, what did you find? And were you able to quiet it down at all? I don't think it's something that can be addressed by the owner - it's likely much more complicated than simply slapping some ferrites on cables (if you could access them safely in the first place).
When I installed my VHF radio in the truck, I was initially happy with what I thought was a fairly quiet truck. I didn't hear any birdies I typically have come to expect from computers and inverters. But then I noticed that weaker signals often had noise on them... just a seemingly higher noise floor with random static. So I got out my trusty TinySA Ultra and sniffed around a little.
I did not see any obvious noise on the display, but then I set it to also show a waterfall. At that point I realized that I could cause seemingly random noise to appear when I turned on the 120 Volt outlets. This is what I saw:
The lower part of the waterfall (blue background) is with the outlets off. The upper area is with them on. Next step was to power my radio from a LiFePO4 battery, to take my 120 V power supply out of the equation. This video shows the radio powered by the battery, with nothing plugged into any of the sockets. Sockets are on at the beginning, get switched off and then back on again. Note the background noise that pops on and off with the sockets:
When I scanned around with the spectrum analyzer to find the VHF noise, I hadn't seen evidence of any significant noise on the lower bands, except for 10 meters (28 MHz). I was out on my rural property a few days ago and decided to see how HF sounded in a very low noise environment. The noise floor out there is about an S1 (!), which is heavenly... I bolted on the old screwdriver antenna I have, to the hitch assembly and grounded it to the truck body. Recognizing that the socket system is noisy, I powered my little FT-817ND from my trusty battery. Happily, the noise floor was almost non-existent, except for a regular 'tick' that might be the radio attempting to charge the non-existent internal battery. Or maybe the truck is the source, looking for a Bluetooth signal or something. Anyway, it was something I could live with. But then I unlocked the door and the big battery contactor engaged.... as in this video:
Definitely not good! S1 to S8 instantly!
What I haven't tried yet is to see whether the 48 Volt system also creates noise like the 120 V system does. I'm cautiously optimistic that it might not, given there's no AC waveform being constructed. But given the general noise emanating from the vehicle itself, maybe I'll be disappointed.
Has anyone else done any testing like this? If so, what did you find? And were you able to quiet it down at all? I don't think it's something that can be addressed by the owner - it's likely much more complicated than simply slapping some ferrites on cables (if you could access them safely in the first place).
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