Electrical noise is unlikely to happen from a moving wire, otherwise each
wire inside any device would be a hazard.
When you move it like in a magnetic field things are totally different.
Also, the moving parts in RC craft do seem to cause some strange sort of
interference i do not understand (especially helicopters it seems).
ST
On Tue, 17 Jan 2006 17:18:55 +0100, lcdpublishing
<
lcdpublishing@...> wrote:
> Yup, that's what I meant. Most of the stuff I make goes onto
>
> machines and they vibrate. So I suspected that if the machine is
>
> vibrating, that could cause this wire to vibrate which in turn would
>
> create "noise" of some sort.
>
>
> The only reason I suspected this is because of a bad experience I
>
> had many years back with radio controlled air planes. I had a plane
>
> that would make spazy moves every once in a while. It was a pain to
>
> fly (well, a challenge). Anyway, after a long time of fighting the
>
> problem it turned out to be the throttle wire. It would rub against
>
> the motor when the plane was in a certain attitude and this would
>
> cause the servos to jump wildly. I recall the guys on the flying
>
> field telling me that it was "electrical noise" cause by that metal
>
> wire rubbing against the metal motor. I added a small shield
>
> between the two and the problems went away. So, I took that
>
> experience and applied it to that little trace wire fix and expected
>
> similar problems.
>
>
> Chris