WiNRADiO G65DDC User’s Guide
116
Problem
Solution
I can hear the
audio and tune the
receiver, but the
audio is very
noisy.
Make sure the
Attenuator
is disabled and the
Preamplifier
is engaged. Check that your antenna is
properly connected, the connector is not loose and
that the antenna cable is not damaged. Does the
noise floor drop significantly if you disconnect the
antenna? If so, then perhaps the antenna is picking up
too much ambient noise. Try to improve the antenna,
or move it further away from the PC. An outdoor
antenna is preferable. Watch for ground loop problems
(for details, see the chapter
Connecting the
Antenna
).
Reception is
obscured with a
buzzing
interference or
periodic RF peaks.
Check for the sources of interference in your
surroundings: it could be fluorescent lights, a lamp
dimmer, or other household appliances. Your PC
could be the culprit. Unless you are able to suppress
the interference at the source, the only solution is to
install a better antenna, preferably an outdoor one.
Computer networks are especially noisy and if your
PC is connected to one, you will almost certainly need
an outdoor antenna. If the interference level varies
periodically with peaks about 30-100 kHz apart, the
most likely culprit is the monitor or the video card.
Modern LCD monitors generate much lower levels of
interference than old CRT ones. A noisy laptop may
also create “comb-like” spectra with peaks several
MHz apart. Switch the monitor off - if the interference
disappears then the cause is the monitor. Move the
antenna away from the computer and observe if the
interference reduces as a result. (See also
Appendix
D – Dealing With Interference
.)