Home Theater RFI Kit

Coax Jumper Choke - RG-8X - RFI Range: 1.8-65 MHz, -30 dB Noise Reduction, 1.5KW PEP, Magnetic Loop, Antenna Choke

SKU JC-1-1500-3
$29.95
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Coax Jumper Choke - RG-8X - RFI Range: 1.8-65 MHz, -30 dB Noise Reduction, 1.5KW PEP, Magnetic Loop, Antenna Choke
Product Details
MPN: JC-1-1500
Country/Region of Manufacture: USA

Simple Jumper Feed Line Choke

The simplest, most cost effective feed line choke is a ferrite ring installed as shown in the picture (at the antenna feed point) to stop feed line radiation or at the radio end of the coax to suppress common mode coax noise current on the coax braid.

Improves antenna pattern by preventing your dipole from becoming a tripole

Suppresses pesky coax braid radiation and RFI

Reduces coax braid common mode current up to -30 dB ( 6 "S" units) on receive

Use one choke for each antenna feed line

Add a double female barrel connector to act as an "extension" of the existing coax.

Magnetic Loop Users: use 1 JC-1-1500 at the antenna feed point to keep all of transmit power on antenna and another at radio end to remove common mode noise received on the coax braid.

Need the ring only and not the jumper, select F240-31-1 as the part #.

Question: Assuming the JC-1-1500 uses mix 31, why is the effective range 1.8-65MHz instead of 1-300MHz?

Answer: Look at measurement chart to see the answer - it takes at least -12 dB of common mode rejection to see/hear a noticeable difference with and without choke. Yes the spec for mix 31 say it is good to 300 mhz but at that frequency the CMRR is very small and hasn't much of effect on common mode rejection. Also when you form a choke with coax your are actually creating a parallel tuned circuit at a certain resonant frequency determined by the coax capacitance of approximately 28 pf/foot and the inductance of the coil. The graph shown that the max CMRR is roughly -30 dB between 1-21 MHz and slightly less as you go higher in freq (the resonant freq of the JC-1-1500 is roughly 10 MHZ and broad banded by the use of the ferrite). Above 6 meters CMRR becomes low so as not to be very effective. If you want to use the choke on higher bands you need to change ferrite mix and the number of turns of the choke so the center resonant freq is higher.

Ferrite are in reality frequency dependent resistors and the specs say they have a resistive component above 1 mHz and under 300 mHz but the resistance (or CMRR) has to be high enough to be effective. We publish the effective range so you know what to expect when used.


TECH NOTE: We also stock RFI kits to protect effected devices such as garage door openers, computers (laptops, desktops), dsl/cable routers, ethernet hubs and many more devices. If you run a high powered RF amplifier in your ham station also consider a linear amp RFI kit which will cut down RFI transmitted by your station. Remember there is always a “transmitter” and a “receiver” of RFI and the quest is to find and choke the “path” the RFI has selected – you need to add ferrites to both the transmitting side and the receiving side to eliminate RFI problems. The RFI-HTS kit only helps suppress RFI on the receiving side.

Typical RFI Problem/Solution:

Hello,
I am Larry, a ham operator and I am having interference issues with
my Direct TV system.
My station is a FT450D through an Ameritron ALS-600. From the amp
through a coax switch  to choose between an OCF dipole or an Hustler
5BTV vertical. Any power over 100 watts and my DTV goes off the air
and must completly reboot/format. Coax is RG-8. The DTV dish is
pointed away from the dipole and separated by about 25'. DTV was
totally useless! They suggested I not talk on the radio while she is
watching TV!  Please help me with a reasonable, cost effective
soultion. (The wife gets really pissed when I shutdown the tv!)

Thank you,

Larry 

 

Hi Larry,

Your RFI problem is quite common and is usually a sign of either a radiating coax feed line or reception of your radiated signal (source) by the Direct TV (the victim) through either the AC power lines acting as “antennas” for your ham signal or the coax braid of the satellite antenna acting as an antenna for your signal.

The solutions are straight forward:

1. To make sure your feed line is not radiating you need a feed line choke at each antenna feed point (also makes your antenna work better since it is not using the coax as part of the antenna).  You can use our simple Kit 110 with 5 snap on chokes on each antenna for this purpose.  Part # Kit 110 at $27.50 each – one for each antenna.  These chokes will keep your feed line from radiating and coupling into your ac power lines.  INFO HERE

2. The radiation from your antennas themselves may also be getting into the ac power lines and coax braid of the Direct TV antenna so you need to protect the victim receiver.  Depending upon the sophistication of your direct TV setup (e.g. home theater, dvd, tape player, sub woofer speakers, etc), the path of the RFI may be coming thru the AC power lines of any connected device to the video including the video monitor itself!  To help solve this problem we have a home theater RFI kit for up to 5 devices (you need a minimum of two – one for the Direct TV receiver(AC and coax input) and another for the video monitor AC power lines and HDMI or video input cable.  Our kit part # is RFI-HTS.  INFO HERE

These items should help reduce the RFI and let you operate on the air while your wife watches TV.

Bob Brehm, AK6R

Chief Engineer