ScottyUK
Electrical
- May 21, 2003
- 12,915
Do any of you have experience of a device called a Radio Frequency Monitor, specifically the RFM Series II, manufactured by Westinghouse? Ours dates from the early 90's. The purpose of the monitor is to detect a change in the background RF level from the generator as a warning of arcing activity somewhere on the generator.
The unit has only been recently commissioned after solving a design problem with the power supply which affected the self-calibration feature and made the unit unusable. It's one of those jobs which a lot of people have fiddled with over the years but now it is working after a concerted effort to fix it properly. Unfortunately there are some strange things happening.
For the benefit of those who haven't seen one of these units, it consists of the following main parts: a heavily insulated RF CT on the generator earthing conductor at the neutral point; a head end pre-amplifier local to the RF CT; about 100m of co-ax in a grounded steel conduit; a narrow band filter at either 3MHz or 4MHz; an averaging circuit and logarithmic amplifier driving a panel meter.
Every day we see an increase in RF activity of about 40dB at roughly the same time and which lasts for a period of about eight hours, then a lull for about four hours and another noisy period of about an hour. This sequence starts at about 1600hrs. Through the day there is nothing but the RF background level detected from 0500hrs through to 1600hrs. This pattern is repeatable and has been trended.
I've pretty much eliminated the mains supply as a source of the noise with an input filter giving 70dB attenuation in the frequency range of interest. The accessible equipment appears to be behaving correctly and has been calibrated, and when a signal generator is used to inject a signal the unit behaves as would be expected. The RF CT and head amplifier are within the neutral cubicle of a running generator and are thus inaccessible. No machine parameters correlate to the RF noise. We can not detect any significant discharge activity using TEV techniques, and the predictable nature of the RF signal does not really support discharge as a likely source. Changing detection band from 4MHz to 3Mhz has no affect on the signal; it is present at both frequencies.
I'm looking for ideas about how to track down the source of this RF signal. EMC type work isn't really my field of expertise, and neither is radio transmission. It has been a long time since I studied antenna theory!
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If we learn from our mistakes I'm getting a great education!
The unit has only been recently commissioned after solving a design problem with the power supply which affected the self-calibration feature and made the unit unusable. It's one of those jobs which a lot of people have fiddled with over the years but now it is working after a concerted effort to fix it properly. Unfortunately there are some strange things happening.
For the benefit of those who haven't seen one of these units, it consists of the following main parts: a heavily insulated RF CT on the generator earthing conductor at the neutral point; a head end pre-amplifier local to the RF CT; about 100m of co-ax in a grounded steel conduit; a narrow band filter at either 3MHz or 4MHz; an averaging circuit and logarithmic amplifier driving a panel meter.
Every day we see an increase in RF activity of about 40dB at roughly the same time and which lasts for a period of about eight hours, then a lull for about four hours and another noisy period of about an hour. This sequence starts at about 1600hrs. Through the day there is nothing but the RF background level detected from 0500hrs through to 1600hrs. This pattern is repeatable and has been trended.
I've pretty much eliminated the mains supply as a source of the noise with an input filter giving 70dB attenuation in the frequency range of interest. The accessible equipment appears to be behaving correctly and has been calibrated, and when a signal generator is used to inject a signal the unit behaves as would be expected. The RF CT and head amplifier are within the neutral cubicle of a running generator and are thus inaccessible. No machine parameters correlate to the RF noise. We can not detect any significant discharge activity using TEV techniques, and the predictable nature of the RF signal does not really support discharge as a likely source. Changing detection band from 4MHz to 3Mhz has no affect on the signal; it is present at both frequencies.
I'm looking for ideas about how to track down the source of this RF signal. EMC type work isn't really my field of expertise, and neither is radio transmission. It has been a long time since I studied antenna theory!
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If we learn from our mistakes I'm getting a great education!