There are only two ways that I can see RF getting transmitted by fluid:
1. The fluid is conductive, and is flowing in plastic pipe. In this case,
the fluid behaves as a wire, and can conduct RF just fine. The solution to
this problem would be to run the fluid through a section of metal
Steve,
can you provide more details such as:
The type of fluid and the conductivity
The physical relationship between your equipment and the application?
How is the fluid piped?
The RF frequency?
What is the symptom that you observe?
Here is my first thought assuming that the chiller pipes the
We have a chiller installed in a customer application where RF is used in their
process, but we believe RF is being transmitted to our product via the fluid.
Soe anh one have any suggestions on how to measure RF in fluids - type of
equipment, etc.?
Thanks in advance and best wishes o the
You should call a power cord manufacturer to see what they use. Depending
on where your vendor is, I would try Electri-cord for North America, Feller
for Europe, and Volex for the UK and Asia.
At 09:05 AM 12/26/2002 -0500, oover...@lexmark.com wrote:
One of our vendors is looking for test
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