• WARNING: Tube/Valve amplifiers use potentially LETHAL HIGH VOLTAGES.
    Building, troubleshooting and testing of these amplifiers should only be
    performed by someone who is thoroughly familiar with
    the safety precautions around high voltages.

Line filters

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I hope I did it correctly. There does not seem to be a huge difference between them except for the one with 4 inductors that shows a spike on the Ground Loop simulation.
 

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I don't know anything about microwaves, if it is not coming back from the microwave then it must be one of the many things plugged in the vicinity that picks the interference up and sends it back. My shop is the the garage far from the kitchen. I dont hear the noise in my audio devices, but I do see it in the oscilloscope. I realized I had noise coming in when I built a curve tracer.
 
I hope I did it correctly. There does not seem to be a huge difference between them except for the one with 4 inductors that shows a spike on the Ground Loop simulation.

There's a huge difference between the Corcom and the rest at high frequency. The Corcom has much higher attenuation for ground loop currents at 100 MHz.

As I noted in previous posts, I suspect the resonance peak is tamed quite a bit in the real filter.

~Tom
 
Why not go to the manufacturers web site and look at the data sheets?

Power Entry Modules

The biggest issue with line filters is knowing what you are trying to filter out.

I've got 15KHz-25KHz EMI from the switch mode ballast in florescent lights in the den. There are no practical filters that will quell it.

On the other hand, if you are dealing with 100KHz and above, then the line filters may be a solution.
 
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