Re: Telephone Lines and Ground Loops
"Ron Hardin" <rhhardin@mindspring,com > wrote in message
news:46514444.C5D@mindspring,com ...
> David Ballinger wrote:
>>
>> "Ron Hardin" <rhhardin@mindspring,com > wrote in message
>> news:465050C0.6F48@mindspring,com ..
>> > My telephone line developed an AC hum, which, thinking about it, left
>> > me curious how ground loops are avoided.
>> >
>> > If you drive two ground stakes into the ground about 20 feet apart,
>> > you can measure about a quarter volt of AC between them. There's
>> > AC floating around everywhere, and no two pieces of ground are the
>> > same potential.
>> >
>> > The telephone company would then seem to have an unsolveable AC hum
>> > problem, and I wondered how they got around it.
>> >
>> > They do ground the phone line boxes every couple hundred feet or so,
>> > though I don't know if that affects the twisted pair directly; but
>> > certainly they have the trouble at the miles-distant termination of
>> > the line and your house, as to what potential the ground is at the
>> > two places.
>> >
>> > It can't be just isolation transformers, because they need the DC
>> > circuit to detect off-hook, not to mention powering the phone on
>> > your desk, if it's got any IC's.
>> > --
>> > Ron Hardin
>> > rhhardin@mindspring,com
>> >
>> > On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk.
>>
>> The answer to the unsolvable hum problem is "The Balanced Pair".
>> the hum exists on both sides of the line as long as the resistance each
>> side
>> of the line is the same and the capacitance to ground equal; the hum
>> cancels
>> itself out between the two sides of the line. If you listen from one side
>> or
>> the other to ground they both hum. The signal you want to hear is between
>> the two sides of the pair. The only place that the circuit is actually
>> connected to ground is in the central office at the positive side of the
>> battery 48 volts or in these modern times,out in your neighborhood Demux
>> point. That little box on the back of the house or office that is
>> grounded
>> only has a spark gap and a fuse in it for your protection, sometimes they
>> fail and cause the imbalance on the pair, usually the first thing the
>> telephone repairman checks after they hear the hum. You wouldn't believe
>> the
>> stray voltages that can be induced on a pair of wires that run parallel
>> to
>> HT power lines, both static and dynamic, real current flows!
>> Anyway, that is why telephone lines Tip & Ring are balanced instead of
>> unbalanced, if they could have done it on one wire $$$ they would have,
>> half the copper.
>> Now Fiber-Optics, that is another story.
>> Hope that helps,
>> Dave___________
>
> Thanks. That's fairly scary, that my computer modem is at the end of a 5
> mile
> wire grounded only at the far end. Quite an antenna, and its own chassis
> ground
> rignt nearby.
>
> I'd assumed they'd have to be grounded at my end too, hence the ground
> loop.
>
> --
> Ron Hardin
Yes it is, now if you think about it, out on those poles going down the
road, the power wires are on top -- usually a ground wire with the hot wire
and or three phase underneath, then a little closer to earth the telephone
then the cable TV and if you live in town maybe traffic signal wires or
intersection video wiring. If lightening does hit the top wire, it is
usually a large spike you get at your house on the power side -- but your
modem line does make a nice return to ground. I believe in surge
protectors! Now, if you do get a close strike, figure where you are in the
voltage divider circuit.
Really close to home, nothing survives, very close to nuclear, distance is
the key to equipment survival. Best bet unplug until after the storm
passes, Bet #2 Insurance, Bet #3 save the guarantee that comes with a really
good surge protector, the one with the $250,000 policy -- read the fine
print & save the receipts for everything, back up your data, at least the
important stuff, live a good life and pray. On the other hand, you may be
ready for a new computer anyway, bigger, better, faster, cheaper,,, well
they don't get cheaper, but you do get a lot more features and speed.
You don't know what you'll miss, till it's gone - - - -
Dave____________