Greetings again,
Thought I'd share something I just found out re: CFL.
I've purchased CFL's mostly from H.Depot. Usually the contractor package. All that I've seen so far are made in China.
In this last pack, all 12/12 work good. I plugged the XTBM in the same extension cord I use for my test socket, screw
in a CFL, then turn it on while watching XTBM (thanks Jeff V). I get an N0.01 on initial startup then it calms down to 0.
Here's the neat part: I reached in to unscrew the CFL before turning off the socket. The N level went to .5
So I backed off and the noise level started calming down. The closer my humanoid hand gets to the sprial tube of the
CFL, the noisier it becomes to the line. In retrospect, it feels like Tesla is playing around from the grave. I guess what
I'm doing is disturbing the electrons in the tube which causes feedback and fluctuation in the CFL's electronics, ballast,
etc. The noise was incredible. So, I went right to the kid's gooseneck, 5-lamp floorstand light and plugged in XTBM.
The shrouds of the lamps are plastic.
WOW! No noise with all 5 CFL's burning (after the initial spike that is). As soon as I reached toward one CFL, the noise
ramped up. Then, I put a single CFL in a metal gooseneck lamp and XTBM'd that circuit. Noise = 0.25 w/o me touching it.
Turned it off and noise gone. It appears we have some RF-type characteristic going on here.
Proximity of the CFL to its surrounding environment may be a key factor when troubleshooting.
Those of you with ceiling cans and other metal-housed lamp sockets might consider the above.
BTW: I've had the kid's gooseneck running on an AM466 for months now w/o failure; no matter the number of lamps
burning in it.