jon morrow
New Member
I am trying to figure out how to attenuate the signal over a specified length of a perimeter dog containment fence. The antenna wire is a closed loop buried about 3" in the ground. Would like to create a 30 ft. long area where the signal is attenuated so as to not activate the dog's correction collar. The system operates at ≈90MHz (FM band). Obvious solution would seem to be to construct a Faraday cage (grounded copper pipe) around the wire over the desired length, but other posters indicate that this does not work. I presume this is because the RF signal and near-field signal is still present entering and exiting the "cage", and creates and inductive current on the surface of the cage that actually may amplify the signal. So… question for those who know more than I….. does anyone see a way to block the inductive effects of the adjacent antenna on the "cage", so that there is attenuation (not amplification) of the signal over the length of the cage (pipe)?? I also do not know exactly how these containment systems operate… their insensitivity to antenna length or configuration, and their short-range sensing, makes me think we are dealing with a near-field effect, probably more magnetic than electrical. Does anyone know? Help.