Permabanned
- Joined
- 28 Nov 2003
- Posts
- 10,695
- Location
- Shropshire
Having received a new router from Zen and found it cured some of my ills opf dropped or high noise connections (a Technicolour TG582n) I decided to wire it up properly. My home LAN is wired, no wireless at all. I had been testing with the router connected to the test socket in the BT master socket in the loft via a LONG Ebay purchased cable. I fitted a new latest filtered faceplate with the extra two AB connectors so the wiring to the router socket was hidden. I reconnected the BT installed twisted pair cabling to the AB connectors, and another pair to 2 and 5 for the phone socket in my office. All seemed well for a few hours, but in the night routerstats showed serious noise and the connection speed dropped substantially. Connecting via the extension cable brought a quiet connection again. I decided to follow the BT laid cable and in so doing was forced to recall I had 2 switched mode power supplies on the opposite side of a studded wall, just near the sockets in my office. The cable ran *RIGHT* by them and alongside a mains cable feeding their 13 amp dual mains socket. One is for a Thunderbolt 10 MHz frequency standard, the other for a frequency divider board. I use them in my amateur radio hobby. The Thunderbolt box itself is slso very near the socket and wiring. These supplies runs 24 hours a day, seven days a week and have done for at least 2 years. I decided to turn them off and reconnect the BT wire. All has been quiet since and I am slightly optimistic one may have been the problem. I am perhaps lucky and not had issues with switch mode supplies causing noise that I have been aware of, so could some of the more knowledgeable folk tell me if this screen shot of the noise margin when playing up could be a SMPS gone awry? Thanks!
