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mr_doubtfire | 17:33 Thu 17th Jul 2014 | How it Works
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An environmental charity I work for powers a battery operated radio from a dynamo on a stationary bicycle which children can pedal in order to listen to the radio. The trouble is when they do there's a great deal of "noise," I'm assuming it's static, and the radio is hardly audible. Is there an easy solution to suppress the interference without it costing too much?
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I'd try inserting an RF choke into the power supply to the radio: http://www.maplin.co.uk/p/rf-choke-22uh-wh31j
03:09 Fri 18th Jul 2014
Probably good to identify where the noise is being generated and suppress it at source. Failing that if you can identify the frequency range a simple filter somewhere in the signal path of the radio should cut it out.
Wouldn't the source be the dynamo itself OG?

Is it not the same thing that cars suffered from in the "old" days? Usually, a capacitor is wired across the terminals to lose the unwanted AC voltage.
Would be my first guess.
plug the radio into the Nat Grid, pay the license fee & spread the wealth
I'd try inserting an RF choke into the power supply to the radio:
http://www.maplin.co.uk/p/rf-choke-22uh-wh31j
Capacitors across the the positive and negative. You need to find the voltage first then select capacitors
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Okay, Buenchico, I've purchased an RF choke. Do I wire it in series or parallel with the dynamo?
What licence fee, Tambo?

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