W6XJ
Joined: | Sat, Apr 4th 1998, 00:00 | Roles: | N/A | Moderates: | N/A |
Latest Topics
Topic | Created | Posts | Views | Last Activity |
---|---|---|---|---|
RFI from bad Netgear wall-wart switcher | May 15th 2012, 15:58 | 1 | 8,071 | on 15/5/12 |
Latest Posts
Topic | Author | Posted On |
---|---|---|
RFI from bad Netgear wall-wart switcher | W6XJ | on 15/5/12 |
I recently experienced a severe case of RFI that blanketed the broadcast band. It was conducted throughout the house, as I could tell when “sniffing” it with an AM radio that was held near outlets. Coincidentally, our DSL-based Internet connection became intermittent around the same time. I did not connect the two at first. Eventually, however, while in the process of rebooting the router I noticed that its wall-wart switching power supply had become extremely hot. It was too hot to touch – clearly, not the normal operating condition. After replacing that power supply with a spare from the junk box, the RFI vanished (and the Internet became stable again). Hooking the bad supply to an oscilloscope revealed a sawtooth waveform on the +5 output, ramping up from 1V to 5V, then dropping and repeating the cycle. An autopsy revealed that the two main supply storage caps – 4.7uF/400V electrolytics – had swollen and leaked out their dielectric fluid. Perhaps these were some of the dreaded Bad Caps that plagued PCs a few years ago. FWIW, the router is a NetGear RP614v4; and the power module is P/N 330 10096-1. The module is made by DVE, and is model DSA-5P-05; rated 5V/1A. -- 73, Curt W6XJ |