Interferance from digital ballast?

steveng

Well-Known Member
Thank you Harley. Also, I paid $180 for 400w digital adjustable ballast with cooltube, 1x mh and 1x hps bulbs, yoyo's and power timer. If I had more money I would have gone better quality. I had to go "cheap" but am pushing $800 total now. I just hope the equipment lasts the one grow.
 

Diablos

Member
Ill second guess him, i build robots and circuits. This is my forte.

It would be EXTREMELY unlikey that a ballast would be able to interfere with a 2.4 - 5.8 GHZ DIGITAL SIGNAL, You were not clear on the fact of, is it your wireless signal or actual gateway signal? I bet money you have it near a fridge or microwave, or your neighbours cordless phone is one the same frequency/channel as your router.

easy solution to this problem is simply to login to your router and cycle the channel it brodcasts on, until you find one without interference, I guaruntee you its an enviromental variable, put short, UHF radios on construction sites.

You cannot replicate interference of this kind using an analogue AM signal in your car, i chuckled, althought i applaude your self help mentality, nice to see people still try to fix their problems.

1. change the routers channel, it should be on 11, try 3-7. You may need to change the channel on your laptop, if its old, if not most new things "Auto-negotiate", google it.
2. ask your neighbours if they have bought a new wireless homephone or router recently.
3. Its not something dumb like a power saving feature on your TX broadcast signal?

god im still gigglin, went to my car and listened to the am radio :)))) no offense, please dont be insulted.

Ill happily get into induction and gates but, it would probly go over everyones head. Im not flaming or challenging. Just offering another view

I live in australia, i assume your cable is the same as out, fibre to the exchange then copper to the door?

EDIT; reread the foil power cord solution.
I dont understand. I know what induction is, but you have wrapped your power cord in foil and its fixed your problem. I know what i would do if that was my ballast, wrip it open and install a schottky diode in rectification schematics.

Leaking that much EMI, tells me how ineffecient your ballast is... I hope your power bills are actually less then when you werent using it. Feel your control gear, is it warm or hot. If its hot this reinforces my point. Ineffecient design disapating unused energy as heat.
 

stak

Well-Known Member
Nah you didn't have to go cheap. You wanted to go cheap. A lot of people do that. Hell, I'm cheap too.
 

steveng

Well-Known Member
Ill second guess him, i build robots and circuits. This is my forte.

It would be EXTREMELY unlikey that a ballast would be able to interfere with a 2.4 - 5.8 GHZ DIGITAL SIGNAL, You were not clear on the fact of, is it your wireless signal or actual gateway signal? I bet money you have it near a fridge or microwave, or your neighbours cordless phone is one the same frequency/channel as your router.

easy solution to this problem is simply to login to your router and cycle the channel it brodcasts on, until you find one without interference, I guaruntee you its an enviromental variable, put short, UHF radios on construction sites.

You cannot replicate interference of this kind using an analogue AM signal in your car, i chuckled, althought i applaude your self help mentality, nice to see people still try to fix their problems.

1. change the routers channel, it should be on 11, try 3-7. You may need to change the channel on your laptop, if its old, if not most new things "Auto-negotiate", google it.
2. ask your neighbours if they have bought a new wireless homephone or router recently.
3. Its not something dumb like a power saving feature on your TX broadcast signal?

god im still gigglin, went to my car and listened to the am radio :)))) no offense, please dont be insulted.

Ill happily get into induction and gates but, it would probly go over everyones head. Im not flaming or challenging. Just offering another view

I live in australia, i assume your cable is the same as out, fibre to the exchange then copper to the door?

EDIT; reread the foil power cord solution.
I dont understand. I know what induction is, but you have wrapped your power cord in foil and its fixed your problem. I know what i would do if that was my ballast, wrip it open and install a schottky diode in rectification schematics.

Leaking that much EMI, tells me how ineffecient your ballast is... I hope your power bills are actually less then when you werent using it. Feel your control gear, is it warm or hot. If its hot this reinforces my point. Ineffecient design disapating unused energy as heat.
That's ok cop I'm not offended, I don't know much about electronic stuff obviously. I wish I was as "smart" as you.... not!! I just did what was recommended on different threads. Covering the cord with foil improved the tv reception slightly, in the box a bit more and when I put touched the foil to the box it became perfect. like I said I don't know what I did, but I was watching the tv as I did it. And I went out and held the control gear or as I call it the 'box' and it was just warm.
 

hotrodharley

Well-Known Member
Second guess me. Second guess the engineers who I have their PDF specifically addressing EMI from digital ballasts and engineering solutions to prevent this? I can email it entirely to anybody interested in it. But it is not imaginary and is very real.

http://www.w0qe.com/RF_Interference/grow_light_electronic_ballasts.html

Here's a URL to another source. If someone does not have trouble with theirs then great. But TV companies do not locate these signals by luck.
 

Figong

Well-Known Member
Second guess me. Second guess the engineers who I have their PDF specifically addressing EMI from digital ballasts and engineering solutions to prevent this? I can email it entirely to anybody interested in it. But it is not imaginary and is very real.

http://www.w0qe.com/RF_Interference/grow_light_electronic_ballasts.html

Here's a URL to another source. If someone does not have trouble with theirs then great. But TV companies do not locate these signals by luck.
It's definitely a legitimate issue, and nope, they take a few sets of readings and triangulate it. :D
 
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