Lucent Technologies MERLIN LEGEND Release 5.0 Installation Manual page 52

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MERLIN LEGEND Communications System Release 5.0
Installation 555-650-140
Installing the Control Unit
Overview
Electrical Noise/Radio-Frequency Interference
In most cases, electrical noise is introduced into the system through trunk or
telephone cables. However, electromagnetic fields near the control unit can
also cause noise in the system. Therefore, you should not place the control unit
and cable runs in areas where a high electromagnetic field strength exists.
Radio transmitters (AM and FM), television stations, induction heaters, motors
(with commutators) of 0.25 horsepower (200 watts) or greater, and similar
equipment are leading causes of radio-frequency interference (RFI). Small tools
with universal motors are generally not a problem when they operate on
separate power lines. Motors without commutators generally do not cause
interference.
Field strengths below 1.0 volt per meter are unlikely to cause interference. To
estimate the field strength produced by radio transmitters, divide the square root
( ) of the emitted power, in kilowatts, ( ) by the distance from the antenna in
kilometers which equals (=) the field strength in volts per meter.
Example:
49,000 kw
This yields the approximate field strength in volts per meter and is relatively
accurate for distances greater than about half a wavelength (492 ft., or 150 m,
for a frequency of 1000 Hz). If the result exceeds 1.0 volt per meter, you may
have to install shielded cables and/or Z200A filters. See Appendix A, "Customer
Support Information," following Maintenance and Troubleshooting, for FCC Part
15 radio frequency regulations.
=
7,000
10 km (6.2 miles)
June 1997
Page 2-3
=
0.7 volts per meter
Issue 1

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