Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

RR-G question

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #16
    Gibverse, the channel which will suffer the most depends obviously on the exact frequency of the channel but also on the frequencies emitted by the PC. Which means it depends on the clock of the PC, it won't be the same for everyone. My own experience was to put the RR-G I had (till last month, now replaced by a G400 Marvel) as far as possible of the CPU and the BX chip. And as an additional way of lowering the interference, to leave the PC open so that the emf would not be reflected back and concealed in the PC by the box itself.

    Aryko, I am afraid that if your shielding is not tight closed, it won't work. But then you would have the heat problem. Unless you attach the shield to the chip or it's radiator or, maybe better, between the chip and the radiator.
    But I don't have these problems anymore with the Marvel.
    Michka.
    I am watching the TV and it's worthless.
    If I switch it on it is even worse.

    Comment


    • #17
      The only channels I seem to get interference on are 2 & 6. Unfortunatly 6 is FOX for me.
      Mine: Epox EP-8KTA3, Matrox G400 32mb DH + RRG, Athlon 1.2/266, 256mb, WD 30gb ATA100, Pio 32x CDROM, Adaptec 2940U2W, WD 18.3GB 10k U2W, Yamaha CDRW4416, Pio DVD-303, Scsi Zip 100, Seagate 10/20 Gb tape, SBlive platinum, Linksys 10/100 nic, HP 712c printer, HP 6200 scanner, Linksys 4port cable router, Linksys 2port print server/switch
      Hers: Epox EP-3VSA, G400 32mb SH, PIII 750, 256mb, WD 10gb, Pio 6x DVD, Zip 250, Diamond S90, Linksys 10/100 nic

      Comment


      • #18
        Mike's right - there isn't an appreciable difference with a layer of aluminium foil. The Marvel concept is the best way to avoid interference problems.

        - Aryko

        Comment

        Working...
        X