DVI cable is interfering with my cell phone

radio1911

Junior Member
Jan 5, 2015
3
0
0
A while back I ran into a weird EMI interference issue between my cell phone and a new custom built PC inside of a Cooler Master CM690 KKN2 case. When the PC booted to Windows calls would drop on all cell phones nearby, whether 3G, LTE, on Verizon or AT&T and they could not connect to any mobile networks. (Nobody in my office has T-Mobile, so we don’t know if they would have been affected too)

I spent a lot of time googling and couldn’t find any solutions. I eventually figured out what was causing it and wanted to post something here in case others are having the same issue. I assumed the high airflow case meant it was poorly shielding EMI from inside the case. It also has a painted interior and I don’t think the shell was grounded. I tried swapping out every single component and cable inside and even swapped out the case, but It turns out all that was completely unrelated.

There was some kind of interaction between my PC’s DVI cable and the NEC monitor it was connected to, and only at a refresh rate of 59 Hz. When I switched to 60 Hz or if I plugged into a different monitor the problem went away completely.

What I still don’t understand is how can a low frequency DVI signal (max clock rate at 165 Mhz) interfere with multiple high frequency cell phone bands (800Mhz to 1700Mhz). I’d love to hear from someone with hardware knowledge of the DVI spec if they have any theories on why this was happening. If anyone’s interested in more details about the machine or setup I wrote a full description about the problem and the frustrating debug process here: http://provare.com/news/cognitive-bias-as-an-impediment-to-effective-troubleshooting
 

VashHT

Diamond Member
Feb 1, 2007
3,330
1,390
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Did the NEC monitor come with a DVI cable with a ferrite? If that monitor itself is particularly noisy they may have had to include one to get through EMI regulations for the monitor. I'm not too familiar with the DVI spec but I've done a lot of EMI testing, just because it's on the DVI cable does not mean it is necessarily the DVI signal that's causing the problem, it could be another clock signal inside the monitor that is getting on the cable and radiating off of it.