I assembled a beta version of the Tuned Signal Sucker, but have not had time to do extensive testing yet. This is copied from a post I added to another thread that some of you may have missed:
I wanted to follow up on the noise issue. This evening I was re-testing an early XTB-IIR on my bench that someone had returned for repair (I replaced a broken connector). As part of my test, I send commands through the digital port to cycle a nearby appliance module on and off. It didn't work. Hmm….
At first I thought I sent the wrong code, but that was correct. I had updated the firmware, so I thought maybe I made a mistake there. Then it occurred to me that I was testing at night. I virtually always do my testing during the day. Since it was dark I had the set of noisemaker CFLs in that room on. Normally I only switch them on to check the AGC response. The noise was strong enough to totally block the appliance module from decoding even the 30Vpp signal coming from the XTB-IIR.
Checking the output of the bandpass filter in the XTB-IIR showed about 500mVpp of in-band noise. (Those CFLs are particularly nasty because their noise is very near the 120KHz X10 carrier frequency.) Just for the heck of it, I plugged my beta Tuned Signal Sucker into the workbench power strip. As the simulations predicted, the in-band noise from the CFLs dropped by a factor of two. (The TSS severely attenuates out-of-band noise, but can't do that at the X10 carrier frequency because almost nothing would be left.)
After plugging in the TSS, the appliance module worked 100% through dozens of cycles. Unplug the TSS – no go. Back in, it works again. Out – no go. I repeated this several more times. Only on two tries of maybe a hundred did the appliance module actually switch when the TSS was unplugged. And interestingly, in one of those cases it actually switched the WRONG WAY.
Of course, if I turn off the noisemaker CFLs, everything is fine. I just thought I would share this with you.
Jeff