Transcript HERE
TECHNISONIC
Understanding
Noise in
Airframe installations
By: Walter Shawlee 2
Technisonic products are available
from Dallas Avionics.
Noise
What exactly is “noise”?
Anything you didn’t want or expect
to hear in the audio system.
System Noise =
Equipment Noise Floor +
Cross-talk (de-selected audio) +
Ground Loop noise +
RF artifacts +
Coupled noise +
Acoustic Noise +
Noise is the Enemy
Installation costs and time are
momentary…
But a bad install is forever.
Take the time to get everything as
right as possible.
Understanding noise origins is
critical.
Types of Noise
In-band audio frequency noise.
Cross-talk
Signal contamination
Inverter/Generator Contamination
Types of Noise
Out-of-Band RF Sources:
AM Comms
HF/SSB
FM Comms
RF Problems
Ship Issues can be multi-modal:
Radio to Radio Interference
Harmonic
Direct
Radio to Audio line rectification
Antenna Induced Standing Waves
Antennas
All simple monopole antennas assume
they have a ground plane equal in
radius to the height of the antenna.
Anything less results in substantial
reflected power,and high standing
waves on the coax cable. This
dramatically worsens interference.
RF Solutions
Triaxial Cable, shield grounded at
one end only.
Do not bundle RF feedlines with
other cables.
Better antenna ground planes.
Better antenna spacing.
Mechanical-RF
The Main Rotor will modulate
outgoing transmissions, and
incoming reception, and change
reflected power.
Antenna PLACEMENT is
everything to fix this.
Antenna Issues
Bottom Mounts work best for AM
Comms on helicopters.
RF Interference Rule
Once the RF interference appears
as AUDIO, it is too late to suppress
or correct it. It has to be
suppressed in the RF mode.
Spacing & Proximity
There’s rarely enough room in
general aviation aircraft...
10 kg in a 5 kg box
Sometimes it’s just not that easy…
Audio Wiring
Wiring topology and routing
have a large bearing on audio
system performance.
No amount of shielding can
overcome design limits.
Audio Wiring
Access/A (floating ground)
technology can provide a 20-30dB
improvement in noise and crosstalk over even high end grounded
systems.
That is 100-1000 times better.
Audio Wiring
Grounded audio returns are highly
subject to GROUND LOOP noise.
This style interconnect was an
early method of saving weight,
complexity and wire, but offers the
worst possible performance.
Ground Loops
How we wish aircraft worked:
Ground Loops
What really happens:
Ground Loops
The “frame ground” is alive with
voltages caused by different loads.
Ground Loops
Attaching audio returns to ground
contaminates the audio signal
with every load current flowing
through the airframe.
These induced voltages can be
VERY large, and are a real problem
especially for low level audio
lines like microphones.
Ground Loops
Ground currents also inject
CROSS-TALK, as every audio line
returned though ground becomes
mixed with every other audio
signal.
Ground Loops
The answer is to LIFT audio lines
from the airframe ground, and
process them as floating signals.
This improves both noise and
cross-talk significantly.
Composites
Composites have these problems:
RF shielding dramatically
reduced.
Ground resistance dramatically
increased.
Static discharge problems
dramatically increased.
Ground Topology
Floating Topology
Victim Wiring
Wiring type determines susceptibility.
Victim Wiring
Un-shielded wiring, with a ground
return is the MOST susceptible to both
interference and ground loop noise.
Shielding, and lifting the ground return
dramatically improves this.
Twisted pairs can be almost as effective
as shielding, IF FLOATING.
Victim Modes
Inductive Coupling is CURRENT Driven
Victim Modes
The only real cure for Inductive
Coupling is INCREASED
SPACING. Remember the inversesquare law.
Shields (unless co-netic material)
are totally ineffective.
Victim Modes
Inductive coupling sources:
Any high current line (AC or DC).
Any inverter/magnetic switching
element.
Internal switching regulators.
Victim Modes
Capacitive coupling is VOLTAGE Driven.
Victim Modes
Shielding is effective for Capacitive
Coupling, IF the shield is a true
shield, and not carrying
current.
Spacing is also effective.
Susceptibility Rules
Most Susceptible Wiring:
High Impedance
Un-shielded/poorly shielded.
Low Voltage
Summary
Use a system that minimizes audio
problems for your specific task.
Wiring has to be appropriate in
terms of shielding and ground
connections.
Audio cable proximity to other
systems is critical.
Summary
Never connect un-needed wiring.
Comms to rear stations.
Nav Inputs to non-flight stations.
Unterminated inputs
Finally
Every system has a noise floor
determined by these factors:
Hardware design & topology
Cabling
Ground/composite issues.
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TECHNISONIC A711L series
Cosmetic Options.
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Powersonix PA
capability.
Nifty PA options.
Latent features.
Ideal mate to the
TDFM-7300.
Address integrated
NAV/COM packages.
ARTS-100
Audio Radio Test System
Has it’s own high current power,
can test or demo virtually all TIL
products, all the way up to the
TFM-7300.
Rack based, or stand alone.
TECHNISONIC
http://til.ca short and sweet.
[email protected] any time for audio
questions.
Available from Dallas Avionics.
Reference stuff:
http://www.sphere.bc.ca/test/data.html
TECHNISONIC
See us at BOOTH 103 / 801
Thank you!