ddrueding said:Do you have a picture of one? I've built about 20 PCs this week, and don't know what you're talking about.
CityK said:ddrueding said:Do you have a picture of one? I've built about 20 PCs this week, and don't know what you're talking about.
Don't have a pic. The last three Antec cases I worked with had them (two were 3700AMB, one Sonota) included in the box with the bag of screws, drive rails, case badge etc etc. Maybe I'm mistaking something else?
I don't think so Mark. Are insulation rings commonly included with Antec's, as I don't recall ever seeing them. The standoff insulation rings that I've come across in the past were all paper-like, and I haven't seen any included in a case's screws & accessory contents for a while (mind you I'm not putting systems together very often).P5-133XL said:Are you talking about the insulating rings that are supposed to be used between the case standoffs and the MB?
CityK said:What I'm talking about is a pair of black O rings. They're roughly 1cm in diameter and the diameter of the ring's hole itself is probably only near .4cm. They aren't very maliable. In all three of these cases only a pair have been included.
Oops....I'm usually pretty good about thatddrueding said:Alright, so you link a PDF doc without warning
See pdf.and 2 web links that don't include pictures?
Yeah me and Chieftec are pretty tightIf I didn't know what they were, I'd be sensing a conspiracy throery here...
CityK said:Ahem, I waiting for it Will
Mercutio said:I've seen them from time to time inside certain cases. The front panel connectors are sometimes wrapped around a ferrite ring.
P5-133XL said:Mercutio said:I've seen them from time to time inside certain cases. The front panel connectors are sometimes wrapped around a ferrite ring.
Again, for what purpose: Front pannel wiring tends to be low frequency, low voltage, low current and thereby not producing enough RF radiation to bother with.
Precisely.P5-133XL said:They look like the ferite rings to protect against EMI
My polling of the electorate here would seem to indicate that you are certainly not alone. As for myself, the inclusion in these last 3 antec case contents packages was the first time I personally encountered these rings. Nevertheless, I have previously come across sporadic tales/questions about ferrite rings for case wiring leads in several user forms. Given these previous descriptions, this is why I assumed that what I had encountered were also ferrite rings.I don't associate them being delivered with computer cases at all - Antec or otherwise
From what I've read in the past, some USB case leads can be particularly susceptible to becoming broadcasting antenneasI can't imagine why they'd be needed unless the power cables they supply are of very poor quality and are broadcasting at unacceptable levels. Even then, power cables are low frequency devices and don't tend to broadcast much at frequencies that matter. They could be used inside the PS to keep it from broadcasting, but then you shouldn't be needing to modify the PS in any form: It should already be designed properly.
My understanding is that wrapping the wires multiple times through the core is indeed the most effective implementation.....I just can't figure out how anyone could even get the wires through the core just once without a lot of hassle, let alone multiple timesMercutio said:The front panel connectors are sometimes wrapped around a ferrite ring.
This might actually be not too far off the mark - Perhaps a change to the regulatory standards for electrical equipment has been implemented and brought about a new inclusion requirement for ferrite rings? Just a wild guess, but certainly plausible.ddrueding said:Never seen them, must be one of those weird, Canadian things.
Sorry Will. I had a lapse of concentration there. By the time I posted "I'm waiting for it", I had forgotten the context of your post and had instead confused\twisted it into a jestful insignuation of unfounded paranoia. Hence, when I offered proof of the existence of ferrite rings for case wire leads, I (mistakenly) jested back that it was time for you to pony up an appology. Nothing to see here. Moving along now.Will said:Waiting for....?
Ferite components are frequently used on circuit leads, component leads (resistors...capacitors, etc), in the design of circuits to eleminate the generation of unwanted radiation and/or coupling of radio_frequency energy that would cause havoc to the device's proper operation.
The wire case leads, originating from the motherboard headers act as radiating antennas and generate interference. Inserting or looping the case wires through a ferrite ring will reduce the cable's ability to radiate interference (It is the same as inserting a radio_frequency choke in series with the lead). This is most effective if the loop is placed as close to the mobo header as possible, thereby choking/cutting off the RF energy before it has adequate antenna length to radiate ... as opposed to placing the ferite choke near the switches and LED's. The effectiveness can be increased even more by passing the ends of the leads through the ferite loop several times...effectively increasing the resistance [impedence] to the flow of RF energy!
time said:Any cable plugged into the outside of a case is a potential broadcast antennae. The ferrite rings are probably supposed to minimize this effect; can one of the true electronics people here clarify this?
A common problem with most rf generating equipment (transmitters, computers, dimmers, fluorescent lights, motors) is the radiated rf from the external leads attached to them. This is called rfi (rf interference) or emi (electromagnetic interference), and it can cause interference to the reception of TV or radio broadcasts, and even interfere with audio equipment.
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Disconnect all possible external leads from the computer and receiver, including the antenna, especially any interconnecting leads, which should be screened with grounding at the receiver end.
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Now begin applying suppression on each lead (one at a time) and noting the effect on rfi. The mains lead may require a few turns wound through a large core such as the FT-240-43/77, but the split beads are easier to fit to terminated cables such as video, keyboard, mouse etc.
Not in the case of what we're talking about here, though! The use of ferrites here is to reduce hash on low-speed signal lines. In the case of what we are talking about here (computer chassis), a well-engineered shielding design is the answer.time said:Sorry CGB, it's to minimize broadcast...
No offence, but you just can't separate the analogue domain from the digital domain when it comes to the topic of noise (in addition to noise levels, some other analogue factors in a digital circuit would be input and output impedance, propagation, attenuation).Perhaps you're confusing digital and analog design issues?
If you are thinking *strictly* logic levels at low frequencies, then yes, there is no affect as such an this is where digital triumphs. However, as far as common high-speed digital goes, low levels of noise can absolutely play havoc on its operation. I'll give a hint: edge clock determination."millivolt-level signals" are of little interest in a digital application.
Well, it certainly is not gobbledygook. A *digital* signal that goes through a permeable filter is completely unadulterated.And no offense, but "permeable noise filtering, in that the signal permeates the filter" is gobbledegook.